Nature vs. Nurture and How Dana's Hopes for Rufus are Crushed
The most interesting relationship in Kindred is Dana’s relationship with Rufus. The complexity of Dana’s feelings towards Rufus make it hard for her to completely condemn all of his actions, however repulsive she might find them. While Dana’s care for Rufus’ life and safety is partially because her lineage depends on him and Alice’s kid, she also finds it hard to view him in an unbiased lens because of how their relationship has formed. When Dana meets Rufus, she meets a real life example of the age-old question of nature vs. nurture. She meets this young slave owner’s son, and by reflex begins teaching him not to refer to black people using slurs, telling him that “I’m a black woman, Rufe. If you have to call me something other than my name, that’s it” (Butler 25). While this lesson confuses Rufus, who thus far has only been exposed to the rampant white supremacy of his time period, he treats Dana with respect and helps her leave his property without being caught by his father, a decision that takes Dana by surprise.
Each time Dana visits Rufus, about five years have passed for him. Despite the large effect that Dana has on Rufus’ mindset about race, he still spends a majority of his life without her, and surrounded by the racism of the antebellum south. Because of this, we see how the things that Dana teaches Rufus get twisted by the society that Rufus lives in, and how her retelling of 1970s racial equality gets muddled up in Rufus’ 1800s white supremacy. This is most visible in Rufus’ coercive relationship with Alice, which was directly inspired by Dana’s marriage to Kevin. He tells Dana that “you want Kevin the way that I want Alice. And you had more luck than I did because no matter what happens now, for a while he wanted you too.” (Butler 163). Rufus makes it clear that his desire for Alice is not only sexual, but he is in love with her and would like to be with her. While his motivation is pure, the only way he can conceive of developing a relationship of any kind with Alice is through force, so he sells her husband away, and rapes her in lieu of a real, consentual relationship. Rufus refuses to see a reality where his relationship with Alice can be anything but violent and coercive. This shows how much his society has "poisoned" him, as Dana puts it.
Throughout Kindred, Dana sees moments that she believes to be signs that Rufus could grow away from the white supremacist society he lives in, hoping that he will one day write his slaves into his will, free Alice and his children, and break the cycle of violence that his family has inflicted, but he refuses to do all but letting his children be free. Ultimately, Dana’s lessons are futile, and the racism of the antebellum south prevails. She realizes this once and for all when Rufus tries to rape her, a line that she believed he would never in his life cross. In that moment, she realizes that though he has respected her for most of his life, he believes that as a black woman, she is ultimately his property, so he can do what he wants and she has to bear it. Once she comes to this realization, she finally feels able to kill him without any remorse. Throughout Kindred, Dana struggles to hold Rufus accountable for his actions, believing that under the racism that has been normalized in his mind, there is room for learning and growth, but as Rufus gets older, and as the system of slavery becomes more beneficial for him, she loses that hope. Eventually, the prevailing racism of the south is too strong for Dana to counteract, and it becomes clear to Dana that no amount of reason or intelligence can break Rufus away from the cycle of racism and violence that came with slavery.
Butler, Octavia E. Kindred. Beacon Press, 2003.
Hi Ruby, I agree that Dana's internal struggle concerning how to go about her relationship with Rufus is a result of more than just wanting to keep her lineage alive. Throughout the novel, Dana displays a strong desire to change Rufus's mindset. As you pointed out, this makes it extremely difficult for her to hold Rufus accountable, and instead, she chooses to forgive him, continuing to believe that he is capable of change. However, at the end, Dana finally realizes that Rufus has been fully consumed by the system he lives in, allowing her to kill him without any remaining hesitations. Great blog!
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ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed reading your post, I think it captures the relationship between Rufus and Dana very well. There really is so much to be said about Rufus but you got a good timeline going in your essay. Good job!
Hey Ruby! The inability to change Rufus' character within this 1800s slave society always hurts to read. At the beginning it's easy to hope for the classic plot, the character saves the day, and Dana solves all the horrors of slavery, but as the book goes on the system just gets heavier and heavier. Your point about Dana trying to hold Rufus accountable is really interesting. At what point does it become his fault and not the systems? Great post!
ReplyDeleteHi Ruby! You did a really good job explaining the unusual relationship between Rufus and Dana.
ReplyDeleteHi Ruby!! I'd really love to see an alternate retelling of Kindred where Dana stays there throughout Rufus's entire upbringing. I genuinely do think she had the potential to have a great impact on him, but her years away allowed for the Weylin's racist ideology to undo any of the work Dana did to fix his morals. The fact that the plantation was largely the same after Rufus took over was quite sad to me, and I wish that wasn't the case, though, Butler's choice to make Rufus not change was probably the realistic route. Great post!!
ReplyDeleteRuby!! You are talking about the most interesting part of the book, and it's one of the questions that I thought the book answered the best. It's really tricky to imagine nazis or slave owners as real people with the same minds as us, since we have such a different set of beliefs and morals, but when someone more or less close to us is face to face with one, we have to question these ideas. Dana tries to talk to him and understand his way of thinking, and we come to see some shifts from what little she could do to nurture him. I really like this examination of how people think and the amount that our experiences influence how we see the world. It's sort of that question of would you forgive a nazi, since they are just living according to the horrible social standards of their time, and nurtured by the people around.
ReplyDeletehi ruby! I thought your blog was very interesting. Your focus on the complexity of rufus and dana's relationship through throughout the novel was very interesting to read. This novel is a rude awakening to the fact that there isn't a simple solution to horrific events in history, like theres no big evil that the hero defeats. Instead, that evil sticks with future generations and never truly goes away. You highlighted some great points about how dana is holding on to this idea that she can change rufus's mindset to allow him to break from his time period. Great blog!
ReplyDeleteThe Alice Situation really brings the issue of Dana's influence to the fore, as we realize that in a perverse way, by giving Rufus the idea that a love relationship is possible between him and Alice, she actually makes Alice's circumstances worse. (Tom Weylin would never have gone to so much trouble to capture and enslave her after Isaac's escape; Rufus "pays too much" for her broken and wounded body.) I actually don't see her as explicitly motivated by the time-travel/ancestor aspect as much as we might expect (although it's surely there in the back of her mind)--she meets Rufus as a young boy, when he is somewhat open-minded and treats her with deference and respect at times, and she can't help but see some potential in him. But the larger social and economic forces are so overwhelming, there are real limits to what she can accomplish. And the things she DOES accomplish end up leaving unintended collateral damage.
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