It Just Happens Sometimes: Subverting Gender Roles in “Shiloh”

Joshua M. Patton
6 min readAug 22, 2022

Bobby Ann Mason’s “Shiloh,” is seen as a masterpiece of feminist short-fiction and it is through this prism that the author skews the traditional love story and readers’ understanding of gender roles. The story is named after a Civil War battlefield that serves as the setting for the final scene in the story where Norma Jean and Leroy face the end of their marriage. The story was published in 1982, a time in which the second wave of feminist politics was facing its most decided opposition, other women who claimed to be feminist but strongly supported the type of gender role for women that the second wave of feminism sought to dispel. What makes this story remarkable is the way in which Mason gives us characters that are opposite of those expectations.

This is most clearly expressed by Leroy when he asks his wife “[i]s this one of those women’s lib things?” (Mason 587). Arguably, this is the only time in the text when Leroy speaks as a representative for men, attempting to blame the liberated female for his inability to fulfill her emotional needs in their marriage. This is apropos because this is Leroy’s story. All of the important things that happen to Norma Jean, all of the moments that propel her character’s change, happen off-page and we only learn about them through Leroy. Those moments when we learn that Norma Jean is “startled to find Leroy at home” (Mason 579) or knows that Leroy “doesn’t know any history” (Mason 587) come through the filter of Leroy’s perspective. There is a dissatisfaction…

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Joshua M. Patton
Joshua M. Patton

Written by Joshua M. Patton

Entertainment, culture, politics, essays & lots of Star Wars. Bylines: Comic Years, CBR. Like my work? Buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/O5O0GR

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