Okay, I wasn't able to convey my points on this reading as well as I would have liked....so here's me trying to do so again!
Gilbert
and Gubar's argument was fundamentally a battle of the sexes. Right
from the beginning, G&G discuss the Snow White fairytale with the
angel/monster binary. What initially intrigued me to their argument was
the idea that "If the Queen's looking glass speaks with the King's
voice, how do its perpetual kingly admonitions affect the Queen's own
voice?" (G&G 449). Now, I annotated that agreed with the first
point offered by G&G, that the Queen tries to sound like the king,
and as such, becomes a monster. The vengeful Queen wages a battle
between Snow White, acting (in my opinion) like a King would in trying
to protect territory. The aggressive nature of this "monster" comes
from her trying to sound like her main influencer--the King's voice.
Though G&G then shift their argument to predecessor problem, they
have shown that women in 19th century literature are easily categorized
into one of these two binaries, depending on who they allow to influence
them. Women that take on male characteristics are portrayed as
monsters (Maleficent from Sleeping Beauty is another example of a woman
in power), and woman that stay feeble and helpless become angels (all
fairytale princesses).
Now let's make a parallel: if male
authors "consciously or unconsciously affirm or deny the achievements
of their predecessors" (G&G 449), could female authors then
consciously or (more likely) unconsciously affirm or deny stereotypes of
their literature counterparts? That is, I think that women will read
literature and hold themselves to a certain set of values and actions
that will somehow define them as the women they want to be. [Yes, I
know some reading this are thinking "no way!" (dont we all love to think
we're the exception)...yet, there are women out there who grew up
reading fairytales and want that fantastical "happy ending".] So if we
(as women) are trying to model ourselves after these "predecessors",
then we stray away from independent, bold choices. However, perhaps
there are some that are the exception to this idea, and they do not
follow the "woman model of literature". These women, then, would have
no other set of standards to hold themselves to than the male model.
(If not one, then the other...gotta love binary relationships)
This
is where I started to stray from G&G. They state that "Bloom's
male-oriented theory of the "anxiety of influence" cannot be simply
reversed or inverted in order to account for the situation of the woman
writer" (G&G 451). Why not, exactly? Why can't it simply be
reversed? I would say that they do not think it can because they think
that women hold themselves to standards different from those of men (as
they say when they split hairs to create the different anxieties that
plague each sex), so women have to fit into some other binary. However,
as all things are not black and white, I'm sure that some women out
there hold themselves to standards of men, or feel like they can relate
to males more than females, so that they do follow this inverted
male-oriented theory. For them, they see this as a struggle to
"invalidate [her] poetic father" (G&G 450) by writing something
original. I really think it's possible....so why the whole talk about
the eating disorders, then?
Female writers would not feel
this "anxiety of authorship" if it weren't for critics like G&G
(assuming they're probably not the first who think this way) that think
women and men cannot be grouped into the same category as authors. Critics
create the tensions of female authors--by pointing out all these
differences, they create a problem that was unbeknown to female author,
this notion that she cannot be grouped with all authors, only female
authors, so that she has to find another way to prove herself to her
peers, critics, and suddenly superior, male counterpart. This is why
(yes, finally bringing it back up), I mentioned the phallus in class.
G&G state, "both children desire to be the phallus for the mother.
Again, only the boy can fully recognize himself in his mother's desire.
Thus, both sexes repudiate the implications of femininity..." (G&G
451). The act of writing as a female, and neither expecting nor wanting
to be compared to female authors, but rather, authors as a whole--that
is, accepting the "anxiety of influences" and saying that yes, you can
invert situations for males and females, is the female author's way of
being recognized as the phallus to the mother. Her actions create her
gender--so that if she wants to be gendered "male", then she does so.
After all, women published under male pseudonyms and were then subjected
to the same "anxiety of influences" the *real* men were subjected to.
G&G mention on page 453 that the "'anxiety of authorship' [is] an
anxiety built from complex and often only barely conscious fears of that
authority which seems to the female artist to be by definition
inappropriate to her sex". Yet, we still have female authors, and we
still had females pretending to be men in order to get their work
published. The fear was created by publishers not wanting to publish
female works if they were not of a certain type of writing--again, this
created problem is what has affected female authors. However, that is
not to say that they are unable to be categorized as men--for they are
if they chose to be...and again we end up at the point that yes, Bloom's
theory can be inverted. The only reason it can't be is because other
authors (like G&G--female authors, interestingly enough), have
determined it can't be. There's always room for change, though.
There's still so much of this piece that I can comment on to help my
argument, but overall, I'm hoping this made more sense than my
statements last week!
2 comments:
Marianna, this is a rich post, and I won't say much because I am hoping others will jump in, but I still think you don't have as much of a contest with G&G as you might think. Perhaps there is a clue in your well-constructed fourth paragraph: that if it were a matter of simply naming, labeling, or establishing an authentically feminine literary tradition, there may be other ways of going about that than by demonstrating how Bloom's schema can be used to provoke a self-annihilation (that then becomes the creative element for the feminine tradition they envision). However, what if they want to establish a tradition that self-perpetuates, and from which emerges its own critical identity, i.e., is its own criticism? Is being recognized as the phallus to the mother enough? Wouldn't that simply establish a matriarchal critical tradition for women that operated according to the same rules as a patriarchal one?
-Prof. Graban
Women writers, especially the woman writers of the 19th century which Gilbert and Gubar are writing about (although this still carries on to present day)cannot be the same as male writers. I would agree that present-day women writers perhaps also have an anxiety of influence to contend with as they compare themselves to their many predecessors (as G&G point out Anne Sexton did), but the anxiety of authorship is something that will plague women regardless of their identification as masculine or feminine.
This is because of the socially constructed role of women, which continually marginalizes and devalues them. I believe someone in class used the term "marked" to identify members of marginalized groups, as opposed to the "invisible" or "unmarked" status of privileged groups. Because women are "marked", their work is not only viewed in the context of their predecessors, but in the context of their socially "other" status as women. Because women are devalued and unprivileged, because socially constructed gender hierarchy demands silence of them, a woman's voice is always going to be questioned, as is her right to be an author.
The queen at her looking-glass is not attempting to mimic the king's voice. The king's voice in her looking-glass is the voice of male-oriented society appraising and criticizing her, telling her she is not "die Schoenste im ganzen Land". Through his critical eye, she is rendered speechless. He is the voice that creates her anxiety of authorship, and that is how he affects her voice.
Gilbert and Gubar are not trying to "split hairs to create the different anxieties that plague each sex" or create a binary between male and female. They are pointing out the difference in authorship and the expression of voice that comes as a result of a society which insists on creating a binary between male and female in which the female is "marked" and the privileged male goes "unmarked".
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