Amy Barksdale: Difference between revisions

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==Personality==
It's been said that Amy Barksdale has mild amounts of psychological damage imposed upon her by her family. It becomes obvious from what she says that she was the forgotten baby of the Barksdales, always playing third fiddle against Rita's attractiveness and Helen's overachieving. She was largely ignored by her sisters, who constantly and ostentatiously struggled for attention from their parents. ("You didn't notice my sisters are so busy competing with each other that I don't even register on their radar?" she asks Daria in "I Don't.") Amy's mother, and possibly her father as well, strongly favored Rita; undershe allalso circumstancespressured andthe bailedgirls herto outbe ofmore troublelike timeHelen, andwho again. This caused Helen tohad become even more of an overachiever,. desperate to win the affection she never received.
 
Amy, on the other hand, dropped out of sight. She remained "barricaded" in her bedroom and read "weird Russian novels" to avoid the conflicts with her sisters (per Rita inand Amy "Aunt Nauseam") and possibly to avoid her parents as well, who paid her little attention and offered no appreciation for her achievements. InThe thissituation wayled, shein avoidedAmy's familyown responsibilitieswords to "years of bitterness and didresentment" whateverbetween all three siblings. "Nauseum" reveals that while she likedresents (perRita being the favourite, she also resented ''Helen'' for showing them up and holds her in thecontempt samefor episode)"nursing [her] childhood grudge" with Rita "well into adulthood". TheIt's situationalso led,Helen that gets the sharpest barb in "I Don't": Amy's ownfirst words to "yearsJake ofare bitternessto commend him for staying married to her. Amy also grew to resent her mother, and resentmenthas effectively cut off ties with her, claiming she "never betweenoffered allus threethe siblingsslightest bit of encouragement or appreciation".
 
As an adult, Amy is sarcastic to the point of rudeness when speaking with or about her sisters, even if she's talking to her nieces or her sister's spouses/boyfriends. She says what's on her mind and doesn't care what anyone thinks of it. (In "I Don't," she feels "no particular obligation to listen to anyone else's B.S. Ever.") Her wit is quick but with a sharp, angry edge. Her lack of involvement in Barksdale family life has carried over to the point that Daria and Quinn barely recognize Amy when she appears in "I Don't." Amy can't recall whether Daria is in high school, college, "or something." She's deliberately remained out of the picture for decades, a willing and determined outsider who is always "out of place" when with her siblings.
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Mr. Eichler said in his interviews that he thought the Barksdales were from Virginia, a Southern state with a cosmopolitan atmosphere. Amy says in "Aunt Nauseam" that she drove "a few hours" to get to the Morgendorffer home, and the wedding for Rita's daughter Erin was not a long drive for the Morgendorffers. All three sisters and their mother probably live within a 200-mile wide circle, not terribly far from each other. Virginia, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland suggest themselves as possible home states.
 
In "I Don't", Amy was last in contact with Rita before the death of her boyfriend Roger - she had no contact after that death and is unaware it happened. She can identify Daria and Quinn on sight, but is unsure how old she is; she hasn't spoken to Helen and Jake in a long enough time to 'joke' that she's amazed they're still married.
 
==Appearances in ''Daria'' Episodes==
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