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MOVEMENT AND MATURITY

It has been said, "The only thing constant is change itself." A change that we all must go
through is the inevitable evolution from childhood into adulthood. In "Doe Season," David
Michael Kaplain writes about Andy, a young girl, who makes this transition while she is
on a hunting trip. In the story the author uses parallels between light, water, and
blood, all things with continuous movement, to symbolize the constant changes that are a
part of life. 
Light plays a very important role in the story. There is always a continuous movement in
nature from darkness to light. Andy believes there is a clearly defined moment in which
dark turns to light and expresses a desire to see this change. " There has to be just one
moment when it all changes from dark to light…. She had missed it
yesterday…today she would watch more closely" (354). In the story the darkness
represents childhood and not being self-aware. Light, on the other hand, is a symbol for
self-enlightenment that comes with maturity and adulthood. Contrary to what Andy thinks,
there is no precise moment when it all changes. Just like life, it is a constant process.
Not only the process of light is important in the story, but also the source. At the
beginning of Andy's dream, she awakens and "sense[s] light, blue and pale, light where
before there had been none. The moon must have come out, she thought" (359). Here the
author is using a foreshadowing of sorts, but to understand it, one must have knowledge
of mythology. Diana, the Roman goddess of the moon, was also the goddess of the hunt.
This is fitting not only because the characters are hunting, but also because the moon
plays a vital role in assisting Andy's transformation. Through all of these uses of light
David Kaplain symbolizes the change from girlhood into womanhood.
In the story Andy sees the feminine light from the moon, and then she sees the doe. From
the doe flows yet another reference to change and womanhood: blood. Genesis 9:4 says that
blood is the "life of the flesh." Throughout history women have been known as the
preservers of life. They provide care and nourishment, whereas the men are the hunters
and killers. "That's what the woods are all about anyway…it's where women don't
want to go" (355). The blood Andy sees coming from the doe appalls her. When her hand was
in the deer it caused her physical pain because it was not in her nature to see the pain
and blood and experience the horror that comes with killing. "And then her hand pulled
free, followed by a steaming rush of blood, more blood than she ever could have
imagined-it covered her hand and arm, and she saw to her horror that her hand was
steaming" (360). Andy then tried to remove any trace of the blood on her. "She moaned and
fell to her knees and plunged her hand into the snow" (360). Women are not unaccustomed
to blood. Their menstrual flow is a natural part of a mature woman's life. But, Andy
despised the blood that came from the doe because it represented death and pain. Blood
symbolizes the flow from girlhood into womanhood, but more than that, it also illustrates
the womanhood Andy is brought into.
The ocean is another symbol used in the story to represent change. This metaphor,
however, is complex. While it alludes to the change that is undergone, like the blood, it
also represents what Andy changes into: womanhood. A woman's body consists of more water
than a man's. Just like the water in the ocean is susceptible to the gravitational pull
of the moon, so is the water in a woman's body. She is like and ocean in that she has
tides. But how the tides affect each woman may be different for each. Nonetheless, there
is a movement of water inside a woman's body. The movement is key, not only in the
physical sense, but also the abstract. Andy remembers the first time she sees the ocean,
"it frightened her. It was huge and empty, yet always moving. Everything lay hidden"
(352). To Andy, the ocean represents her as a woman, but also it describes life in
general. A young girl such as Andy may not be able to conceptualize life. It scares her
because it is so big and unknown, and yet she realizes that it is constantly changing.
She too is changing, physically, emotionally, and spiritually. "…All around her
roared the mocking of the terrible, inevitable, sea" (360). As much as Andy resisted the
change, it was certain. Just as Andy's body is constantly in motion of change, so is her
life and so will it always be. 
In "Doe Season," David Michael Kaplain successfully uses the moving images of light,
blood, and the ocean to represent the prevalent changefulness of life and the maturity of
one girl into womanhood. Even though, like Andy, one may not want to change, the author
proved it is impossible to escape that intrinsic feature of life. 
Bibliography
Kaplain, David. Doe Season. Literature: Reading, Reacting, 
Writing. Ed. Laurie G. Kirszner and Stephen Mandell. 3rd ed. Forth 
Worth: Hardcourt, 1999.(349-360)

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