Mom Son: Real
: Mothers often provide the security a son needs to explore the world while knowing he has a safe place to return.
– Vivian Sobchack (Film Phenomenology) real mom son
Fast forward to the 19th century, and the archetype shifts from tragic fate to psychological suffocation. In Charles Dickens’s David Copperfield (1850), the gentle, child-like Clara Copperfield is a mother who fails to protect her son from the brutal Mr. Murdstone. She represents the weak mother—loving but impotent. Conversely, in Somerset Maugham’s Of Human Bondage (1915), the protagonist Philip Carey is crippled not just physically but emotionally by the memory of his dead mother and the subsequent coldness of his aunt. The absent mother becomes a haunting ideal no real woman can match. : Mothers often provide the security a son