How Pearl Button Was Kidnapped
"How Pearl Button Was Kidnapped" is a 1912 short story by Katherine Mansfield. It was first published in Rhythm in September 1912 under the pen name of Lili Heron.[1] It was republished in Something Childish and Other Stories (1924).
Plot summary[]
Pearl Button is playing outside whilst her mother is ironing clothes. Two Māori women go up to her and ask her to come with them. After a long walk they arrive at a Māori settlement, where the little girl is given a fruit to eat. Then they drive towards the seaside. Pearl has never seen the sea; they play about. Suddenly, a crowd of policemen runs toward them to take Pearl away again.
Characters[]
- Pearl Button
- two Māori women
- more Māori people
- family[mom]*
- police*
Major themes[]
- Māori culture : the story is written from the child's perspective, who takes to Māori culture right away. However, she is scared by the white men coming to pick her up.
Literary significance[]
The text is written in the modernist mode, without a set structure, and with many shifts in the narrative.
Footnotes[]
- ^ Katherine Mansfield, Selected Stories, Oxford World's Classics, explanatory notes
Categories:
- Modernist short stories
- 1912 short stories
- Short stories by Katherine Mansfield
- Works originally published in Rhythm (literary magazine)
- Works published under a pseudonym
- 1910s short story stubs