Women in Ken Burns' The Dust Bowl
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The Dust Bowl, a film by Ken Burns for PBS 2012. |
In
his documentary The Dust Bowl, Ken
Burns focuses on female homesteader, Caroline Henderson, as an example of a
farmer who endures the largest environmental disaster in modern American
farming history. Burns’ portrayal of
Henderson as a person who dreamed of owning her own piece of land and the
hardships she overcame in the process brings feminine insight to the view that
homesteaders were predominately male. Burns
uses Henderson’s writing about life as a homesteader and wheat farmer to
narrate much of the film. His decision
to choose the words of a female writer as representative of farmers’ experiences
in the dust bowl implies a certain gender bias. However, the viewer comes away
from the film with the perception that the hardships, in addition to being an
experience defined by male and female roles, were also part of a larger human
experience. The narration serves, in a sense, to bring together both males and
females as equal players in ecological tragedy.
Burns
devotes a portion of the documentary to the female dominated domestic sphere
when he examines the futility of keeping the inside of the home clean over a
decade of dust storms. The images of women sweeping dust out of the interior of
their homes, hanging wet sheets around windows and setting dishes upside down
on the table remind the viewer that the consequences of the great plow up effected
professional and domestic, male and female spheres equally. We also see the
equal treatment of gender in the stories of men and women who, whether because
of financial difficulties or domestic struggles, committed suicide to find
relief from the madness the dust bowl created in their lives.
The
film concludes with a look at Henderson’s life after the dust bowl. Burns’
points out that she never sold out or left her land despite the trials she
faced. She stood as a symbol of
character in a male dominated occupation. He also discusses how her experiences
in the 1930’s affected the rest of her and her husband’s lives as farmers. She refused to irrigate her land after the Ogallala
aquifer was accessed and lived a simple life within her means. Henderson seemed
grasp the lesson that other men struggled to learn; that nature was ultimately
in control of no man’s land on the prairie and man was not.
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