44 pages 1 hour read

Tracy Chevalier

Girl With a Pearl Earring

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2000

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Character Analysis

Griet

As the narrator and subject of this bildungsroman, Griet is the central character of this book and the only one whose mind we have access to as readers. Though she is in the process of maturing, and is thus not always a reliable narrator of her own feelings, nor a clear-eyed observer of the motives and actions of others, she is astute enough to provide the reader with a thorough understanding of her development from innocent girl to wise(r) young woman.

The novel’s focus on Griet’s development, on the push and pull of her relationship with Vermeer, and on her eventual choice to forgo a life that keeps her within Vermeer’s world, provides the necessary canvas on which to explore questions of female agency, artistic vision, and the importance of family and community. If Vermeer’s painting of Griet as the Girl with a Pearl Earring is representative of the possibilities of a life lived purely for art, her life after that painting is representative of life lived in duty to family. In this context, Vermeer’s masterpiece, instead of seeming the inevitable product of the talent of a genius, is, rather, the result of a young girl’s unfulfilled longing to choose a different path.