The Moth (Short Story)
Encyclopedia
“The Moths” is a short story written by Helena Maria Viramontes
. It was first published in 1985 in Viramontes’ first book, The Moths and Other Short Stories, by Arte Publico Press in Houston, Texas.
Coming out of oppression – Helena Maria Viramontes writes often about the oppression of women and how they must learn to overcome the dictates of tradition, family, and culture. The moths represent the traditions that destroy and degrade women, and how women are only freed from such power after death.
Helena Maria Viramontes
Helena Maria Viramontes is an American fiction writer and professor of English.-Childhood and education:Viramontes was born into a Mexican-American family....
. It was first published in 1985 in Viramontes’ first book, The Moths and Other Short Stories, by Arte Publico Press in Houston, Texas.
Plot Summary
The story is a first-person narrative of a Latina granddaughter reminiscing about her relationship between her family, most especially her grandmother, when she was a teenaged girl. She speaks about the indifference she felt among her sisters because she was not “pretty or nice” and could not “do the girl things they could do”. She was constantly in trouble, saying she was “used to the whippings” and spent her time watching over her grandmother since her grandmother always watched over her. Throughout the story, the grandmother becomes more and more ill, while the narrator becomes more and more responsible. When the cancer finally kills the grandmother, the granddaughter continues to take care of her, undressing her and cleansing her in the tub, as she holds her and rocks her back and forth saying “there, there abuelita”. At this point the moths are released from the grandmother; the moths which the grandmother told the narrator “lay within the soul and slowly eat the spirit up.” The narrator cries and sobs in the tub with her grandmother until her sadness transformed into relief.Themes
Rebirth – The narrator talks about the sun and how it cannot shine forever. It must disappear in order to reappear for the next day. As she notices the sun’s “final burst of burning red orange fury” she also notices that “endings are inevitable [and] they are necessary for rebirths”. At this point in the story, it becomes clear that Abuelita has died. The narrator, whom felt distant from her mother, was now longing to be with her, in which a new relationship was born from the death of this old one.Coming out of oppression – Helena Maria Viramontes writes often about the oppression of women and how they must learn to overcome the dictates of tradition, family, and culture. The moths represent the traditions that destroy and degrade women, and how women are only freed from such power after death.