Monday, May 20, 2019

Victorian Literature: Anglo-American Feminism, French Feminism

ssignment Title Comp ar and Assess at to the lowest degree two of the following approaches in feminist guess, with illustration from two of the straight-laced text editions you fill smokevas Anglo-American feminism French womens lib Socialist or Marxist Feminism feminist approaches influenced by Foucault. I decl ar that this is my hold work and that I suffer followed the code of academic good conduct and have sought, where necessary, advice and guidance in the proper presentation of my work. Signature Date Comp ar and Assess at least two of the following approaches in feminist supposition, with illustration from two of the twee texts you have studied Anglo-American Feminism French Feminism Socialist or Marxist Feminism Feminist Approaches influenced by Foucault. Feminist theory like psychoanalytic theory is relatively modern in its creation. The immergence of feminist literary theories can be linked to the out break of distaff political uprising in the early 19th cen tury.The French Revolution marked the beginning of a fight for the obtaining of womens rights to power and equality in society. Elaine Showalter comments that the ideological brotherlyly acceptable scene of Victorian women as a whole can be seen as visit a woman who would be a Perfect Lady, an Angel in the House, contently submissive to men, but sanitary in inner purity and religiosity, queen in her own realm of the Home. (Victorian Womens Poets, rascal 13)Feminist theory is segregated into separate view points of feminism as a whole French Feminism analyses literary works from a perspective of a psychoanalytic view, drawing upon the work of Lacan to highlight view points. It helps to analyse the ship canal in which women are positioned in society in the text and how they can be perceived to be repressed. Marxist Feminism takes its inspiration from how the women can be perceived to be oppressed in literature. American feminism analyses literature from a textual expressive vi ew point.All feminist out looks have their issues which provide flaws into their argument. To be sure, most feminist thinkers today assume that nurture, at the very least, qualifies nature. Recently, however, a human body of poststructuralist theorists deploying both male and female signatures have claimed that there is no sexual urgeed reality, that the concepts of man and woman are, as few would put it, always already fictive since human identity is itself a tenuous, textu every(prenominal)y produced epiphenomenon. (No Mans Land. varletxv).Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronti provided feminist critics with a canvas of a examples of marginally autobiographical Victorian gynocentrism. The production of text from a woman, flavour at the emphasis placed on the female place in the hi account of the text, the structural placing of women and the thematic view of women in the text. Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar argue that women writers such as Emily Bronti had been trap into the role s that society has manipulated, as they were trapped against the patriarchal view of the angel of the house. but even thought there is a desire for this view to be usurped, Bronte still curtails herself to societys expectations by debilitating and eventually killing off of the strong rebellious charcter of Catherine, emphasising her own fear of what the female form in which she was writing. Gilbert and Gubars reading of Wuthering Heights classes it as a A bible of Hell. (Gilbert, S & Gubar, S. Mad woman in the attic) The classification of Wuthering heights as a subsisting hell is created in type by the Byronic hero of Heathcliff.Although Gilbert and Gubar look into the curtailment of women existence curb to the house, trapped into submission by domesticity, Wuthering Heights provides Catherine with her own sense of control where she can break brotherly confinements. Yet Catherine chooses to be confined by domesticity and social patriarchate by marrying Edgar Linton. Bronte does however portray the sloppiness Catherine feels in making her choice between what she desires and what is socially expected You heat Mr Edgar because he is handsome, and young, and cheerful, and rich and loves you. The last, however, goes for zippo You would love him without that, probably, and with it, you wouldnt, unless he possessed the four former attractions. (Wuthering Heights, Page 119)Through the use of the second generation Cathy, Bronte allows the discipline from cultural to natural choice to be made via the successful relationship between Cathy and Hareton.Kristeva comments on the text presses the linguistic sign to its limits, the semiotic is fluid, plural, a kind of pleasurable creative excess over very(prenominal) meaning and it takes sadistic delight in destroying or negating such signs. (Literary Theory an introduction). The dual nature of narration in the novel serves thematic purposes, in that both provide commentary on the role of women in society. The fe minist nature of the novel can be seen through Lockwoods comments on the success of Nellys narrative story telling.Bronte manipulates the Victorian view that women have innate frailty and makes a parody out if the view by portraying Catherines illness as a strength in which she is manipulating those around her through Nellys perception I wasted no condolences on miss, nor any expostulations on my mistress, non did I pay attention to the sighs of my master, who yearned to judge his ladys name, since he might non hear her voice. (Wuthering Heights, Page 158) Catherines subsequent illness shows itself in the form of a disillusioned madness.Brontes use of this madness is to offer clarity to the social structure that the very cultural expectations of Catherine are the things that cause the feared wild nature to develop This feather was picked up from the heath, the bird was shot we saw its snuggle in the winter, full of little skeletons. Heathcliff set a trap over it, and the old o nes dare not come. I made him promise hed never shoot a lapwing, after that, and he didnt. Yes, here are more Did he shoot my lapwings, Nelly? Are they red, any of them? Let me look. (Wuthering Heights, Page 160) Gilbert and Gubar view Catherines internment in Thrushcross Grange as the reason for her being trapped into a fair(prenominal) madness Imprisonment leads to madness, solipsism, palsy Starvation both in the modern sense of malnutrition and the archaic Miltonic sense of freezing (to starve in ice) leads to weakness, immobility and death. (Rylance, Page 253) Catherines embracing of Victorian societal views that kept her from being with Heathcliff. Included in these views are the expectations of women.It is important to note because the awareness of social standing and gender in this example prevent genuine love prevailing. Bronte also argues that Catherines in world power to resist social ambition is reflective of the oppressive power of the social structure of the Victo rian society. Bronte feminises Lockwood by giving him the typically female characteristic of frailty, according to Beth Newman Lockwoods supine passivity (he is bed ridden during most of her narrative) suggests that he is in the feminine position with respect to Nellys controlling behold. (Gender, recitation and survey in Wuthering Heights, Page 1034). Emily Bronte portrays Hareton as a model man who does not fear women but does not repress them either, this is marked through his not hiding away from Cathys advancesHelene Cixous has written that the Medusa who has terrorized the male plain, looked at straight on, is actually beautiful and Laughing Bronte has uncannily anticipated Cixouss analysis of the masculine fear of the womans gaze in suggesting that Hareton, alone among the male characters in the novel, is able to laugh back. (Gender, Narration and Gaze in Wuthering Heights, Page 1037). The splitting and fragmentation of Catherines feminine desire through the lack of a st able identity, she is Catherine Earnshaw, Catherine Heathcliff and Catherine Linton at the similar time. The theme of heaven and hell is prevalent most through Heath cliffs representation as a satanic wild figure that should be feared. Bronte links Heathcliff to the wildness of nature through his name he beseems one with the heath surrounding the heights.Catherine expresses her own desire to be associated with Heathcliff through If I were in enlightenment, Nelly, I should be extremely reprehensible. Because you are not fit to go there, I answered. All sinners would be miserable in heaven. I was only going to say that heaven did not seem to be my floor and it broke my heart with weeping to come back to earth and the angels were so angry that they flung me out, into the middle of the heath on the top of Wuthering Heights, where I woke sobbing for joy. (Wuthering Heights, Page 121) Bronte uses the binary opposition to emphasise Catherines ideal of Heaven being Heathcliff.Yet due to the confinement of social expectation Catherine turns her back on Heaven and places herself in the Hell that is Thrushcross Grange causing a fragmented version of herself to become her existence. Kristeva comments on Wuthering Heights lack of ability to have a simplistic narrative form, there is a use of multiple genres to create the conglomerate binary oppositions. The use of the re-emergence of the choice between patriarchy and desire through Cathy has the object of articulating the mother-child relation as a site for both affirm the archaic force of the pre-oedipal, which although repressed is thus also preserved. two affirm the fluid, polymorphous perverse status of libidinal drives and both evoke a series of sites of corporal pleasure capable of resisting the demands of the symbolic order. (Jacques Lacan A feminist Introduction, Page 149) Thus, although Wuthering Heights ends in cosy domesticity, the gaps in its enunciation express a feminist resistance to the patriarcha l order in which its story partially acquiesces for the narrative undercuts the condition of its own telling even while implicating them in specular economy that fetishizes and appropriates women. (Gender, Narration and Gaze in Wuthering Heights, Page 1039)Christina Rossettis pixy grocery store expresses the frustrations from enforced female passivity, articulating bitterness about being the second sex, and the limitations on female potential this is evident through out the poem, culminating as two women become what Victorian patriarchy predetermines, wives and mothers. Goblin Market shows women in social relations, in marketplace economies in literary history and women in sexual economics. Elizabeth Helsinger explains that Goblin Market is A feminist utopia based on sisterhood against male domination and the male market or a legitimating of separate spheres? Victorian studies, 1991). Goblin Market allows Rossetti the chance to escape the archaic patriarchy and create a fantasy realm.Rossetti allows Lizzie and Laura an insight into the male commodities of male utopia that is the market place, and how to successfully regain equal control. This is a morally nonsense poem, which puts religious myth and sexual lure into a market economy which is endlessly unstable. (Victorian Womens Poets, Page 138). Rossettis creation of sisterly solidarity gives a feminine observation tower Hug me, kiss me, suck my juices Squeezed from goblin fruits for you,Goblin pulp and Goblin Dew. Eat me, drink me, love me For your sake I have braved the glen And had to do with goblin merchant men. (A Choice of Christina Rossettis verse, Page 16). The sexual suggestiveness of Goblin Market has undoubtedly made it a compelling work for feminist readers concerned with what constitutes a distinctly female imagination. (A Music of Thine own. Victorian Womens Poets, Page 50). Goblin Market, the title poem of Christina Rossettis first volume, is the questioning feminine discourse it mas ks. (A Music of Thine own Womens Poetry. Victorian Womens Poets, Page 49)Rossettis representation of gender is not in the label or images she finds but in the structure of the whole poem with its repeated tasting. (A Music of Thine own Womens Poetry. Victorian Womens Poets, Page 49) In many respects Goblin Market is directly contradictory to many nineteenth century views about the role of the woman poet. Mary Ann Stoddart, 1842, defines the sphere of the poetess as All that is beautiful in form, ticklish in sentiment, graceful in action will form the peculiar province of the settle powers of women. Goblin Market can be said to have none of these qualities.This metrical indulgence, gives Goblin Market a sensual art for arts sake, which is usually reserved for male poets, making this offering to the public by a poetess incompatible with Victorian notions of female poetic beauty Laura performs a familiar role in literary history that of the fallen Eve. She relinquishes herself t o the sexual temptation offered by the evil goblin men. Her sin is increase by prostitution in selling a lock of her hair in return for the fruits. This can be viewed as an act of rape the goblins cut her hair for payment, when, at the time, a womans hair was a somewhat sacred thing.The fallen woman is a common figure in literature, however, because she comes from the creative foreland of a female poet the representation comes to have a few problems in its interpretation. Yet still, Laura receives her salvation, from her sin of consume the fruit, through the self-sacrificing actions of her sister. Lizzie plays the male role of redemption. While Rossetti can be viewed in opposition to the Victorian ideals of female creativity, there is an inherent conservatism in her work that creates problems with the idea of her being a in truth radical or feminist writer.Unlike the other Pre-Raphaelite poets, Rossetti does not embrace atheism, but or else adheres to a strict Anglo-Catholic fa ith Goblin Market is Christina Rossettis most remarkable long poem. She was also a writer of consummate lyrics. What can be called the feminine discourse which respondes to the aesthetics of expression and repression overflow and barrier, in Goblin Market, is also at work in her short poems. (A music of thine ownWomens Poetry, Victorian Womens Poets, Page 54).Through both of the texts analyzed it is important to notice that as Showalter states that it is in fact, female imagination cannot be tempered by literary historians as a romantic or Freudian abstraction. It is the product of a delicate network of influences operating in a time, and it must be analyzed as it expresses itself, in talking to and in a fixed arrangement of words on a page, a form that itself is subject to a network of influences and conventions, including the operations of the marketplace. (Victorian Womens Poets, Page 12) Both Emily Bronte and Christina Rossetti were classed as typically romantic Victorian wom ens writers.However this view is highly problematic as both women try to break the curtailments of Victorian archaic patriarchy in their work, constantly testing and pushing the boundaries of female authorship Romance fiction deals above all with the doubts and delights of heterosexuality, an institution which feminism has seen as problematic from the start. In thinking about this problem I myself have lay down the psychoanalytic framework most useful since it suggests that the acquisition of gendered subjectivity is a process, a movement towards the social self , fraught with conflicts and never fully achieved.Moreover, psychoanalysis takes the question of pleasure seriously, both in its relation to gender and in its understanding of fictions as fantasies, as the explorations and productions of desires which may be excess of the socially possible or acceptable. It gives us ways into the discussion of popular culture which can avoid the traps of moralism or dictatorship. (Romance Fiction, Female sexuality and class. Page 142)

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