Now that Im a woman

Cynthia or Shana Moulton's work in "The Whispering Pines" shows off, in my opinion, a weird and unenjoyable piece of work that on the contrary provokes thought upon casting a deeper look at the body of work as a whole. From her use of colors to the music that accompanied it with many other direct expressions of emotions and feelings do not allow me the comfort of being able to sit through the whole episode. As the author describes her work as "a kind of melodrama, its heroine a faltering, rather than fallen, woman, and it affirms the genre's demand for a primacy of objecthood." I agree with the way the story was setup and I appreciate the way the story was told. How Cynthia slowly transforms to embody something more than her physical state at the end is still a myth for me.

All in all I feel that Moulton is trying to say a lot of things from coporeal existence to material possessions, she seems to be trying to express many aspects of womanhood but none necessarily trigger me to really look at the situation with a changed perspective.

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