Young Girls
What do the "young girls" come to represent in the story, Young Girls?
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Asked by
Jill W
Last updated by
Jill W
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The girls seem, to the narrator, largely untouchable: he desires more than anything to simply be noticed by them, and he befriends Monsieur T. in order to have the chance to interact with them. The girls are, for the most part, rude and impolite, giving off an air of superiority toward the townspeople. In this way, the girls come to represent the divisions among social classes that the narrator, as an adolescent, could not fully conceptualize.
Young Girls, BookRags