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Tarryn FisherA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
In the novel, pregnancy is symbolic on multiple levels. It serves as a woman’s way to exert power over men and their relationships. But it also represents the highest form of love: that of a mother to a child. For Seth, pregnancy represents his virility and his desire to carry on his genes: The women in his life are only vehicles for carrying his children. This is why he leaves Regina after she declares that she will not try to get pregnant after her miscarriage. Seth's view that women are secondary to the children they can provide him manifests in his drugging Thursday after he impregnates her. He never states why he doesn’t want a child with her, but it is clear he wants to keep her as a mistress, just not as a wife. This is a blow to Thursday because she knows Seth really wants children, and it is infinitely cruel, not to mention criminal, on Seth’s part.
The concept of “trapping” someone in a marriage with a pregnancy is explored several times in the novel. First, Thursday’s mother encourages her to get pregnant so that Seth will not have another choice but to be at home more often; she does not know about Thursday’s miscarriage.
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By Tarryn Fisher