ext_6997 ([identity profile] carmine-rose.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] trennels2005-08-30 12:17 pm

Fairness in the Marlow household

I was wondering if anyone had any thoughts on the fair/unfair treatment of the Marlow young by their parents. I'm thinking specifically the treatment of Nicola by her parents/mother in Cricket Term. Is there anyway this could have been handled better? Should it actually have been Nicola who was going to have to leave? Should they have told her or dropped it on her in the summer holidays? Should they have removed all the girls, or perhaps just both twins?

For that matter, should Lawrie have been given the Prosser? (I know this wasn't her parents' decision, I'm just interested whether people think it was a good judgement call on the part of the staff.)

In a similar vein, what about the horse business in Peter's Room? Was it fair that their mother bought Ginty a horse for her birthday, and said no-one else was to ride it? Was it reasonable to buy herself one before ensuring the children all had equal access to a horse for hunting? In effect, she created a situation where one daughter was the only one in the family who was unable to go hunting (without hiring a horse), which seems harsh to me. But then, I'm from a small family where such unequality with gifts never happened - is this normal for a large family? Was Lawrie's reaction reasonable, or did other readers take it as just one more example of her throwing whiny tantrums?

These two occasions seemed to me to best illustrate Mrs. Marlow's failings as a mother (and also perhaps where the children got their selfishness) - I wondered if anyone else felt the same.

Can anyone else think of any other examples of this kind of thing? Or of fairer treatment?

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 03:47 pm (UTC)(link)
But I didn't ever say she shouldn't have bought the horse, did I? I said I was conflicted over it, or words to that effect. I posed it as a question for debate. I don't see how you get from a question like "Perhaps I should have reworded that to say 'Was it reasonable...?'" to a statement of "New party clothes for all is more important than Mrs. Marlow!", even if "... seems pretty frivolous" is en route.

Because, as you note yourself (http://www.livejournal.com/community/trennels/3795.html?thread=106963#t106963), questions are not intrinsically neutral. The format in which a question is presented - the assumptions that you make when you ask the question - tells the person reading the question something about what your thinking is. You noticed that yourself when I asked a question which made implicit assumptions orthogonal to your own. But your own implicit assumptions are, it seems, not up for debate - nor are you even prepared to acknowledge you are making them. I have now checked the threads, and it appears that - despite your horrified denial when I made your implicit assumptions explicit - I wasn't confusing one commenter with another.

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 05:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I admit there and then that my assumption may be wrong - how is this being unprepared to debate it?

You're not prepared to debate the assumptions you made in the questions you asked in your original post. You're not even prepared to admit you made assumptions. You seem to be starting from the point that all your assumptions are neutral, not up for questions or debate, or even to acknowledge that you made them.

I'm not going to continue this discussion

Evidently you are not.

[identity profile] ex-ajhalluk585.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 09:07 pm (UTC)(link)
She isn't. Check below. Don't worry. To my certain knowledge this is the fourth fandom to which she has brought her own special debating skills (and to two other cross-fandom forums to boot). From Kabul to Kamchatschka, from Kandahar to Kansas, wherever two or more fen are gathered together, they shall debate whether [livejournal.com profile] yonmei is Wrong but Wromatic, or Right but Repulsive.