This passage from "Royal Beatings" by Alice Munro reflects the theme of the performance aspect of Rose's beating at the hands of her father. Rose gets into an everyday kind of argument with her stepmother, Flo, who then asks Rose's father to beat his daughter. In this passage, the father does so in an almost ritualistic way. For example, he removes his belt slowly, and he speaks in a strange voice that isn't his own. Rose notices these things, even as a child, and she wonders if the aspect of performing also motivates people to commit severe atrocities such as murders. This passage reinforces the idea— which is one of the themes of the story—that Rose's father is administering this beating as a kind of family ritual, and that it has meaning only as a ritual, not as an act that is deeply felt or registered. You may have further thoughts about how this passage relates to the themes and characterization of the story.
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