Title: Feminist Criticism
1Feminist Criticism
EH 4301 Spring 2006
2Feminism
- The theory of the political, economic, and social
equality of the sexes.
3Feminism
- Examines ways in which women are excluded,
suppressed, or exploited. - Economically
- Socially
- Politically
- Psychologically
4Traditional Beliefs
- Patriarchy
- Any culture that privileges men by promoting
traditional gender roles
5Traditional Beliefs
- Men
- Rational
- Strong
- Protective
- Decisive
- Women
- Emotional (irrational)
- Weak
- Nurturing
- Submissive
6Traditional Beliefs
- Traditional gender roles
- Used to justify inequities
- Excluding women from equal access to leadership
and decision-making positions - Paying men higher wages than women for doing the
same job
7Traditional Beliefs
- Patriarchy is by definition sexist
- Promotes the belief that women are innately
inferior to men - head of the tribe or family
8Traditional Beliefs
- Biological Essentialism
- Belief of inborn inferiority
- Based on biological differences between the sexes
- part of our unchanging essence as men and women
- hysteria
9Roots of Feminism
- Feminists do not deny biological differences.
- Physical size
- Shape
- Body chemistry
- Differences do not make men naturally superior to
women. - more intelligent
- more logical
- better leaders
10Distinction Between Sex Gender
- SEX biological constitution as female or male
- GENDER our cultural programming as feminine or
masculine
11Roots of Feminism
- The inferior position long occupied by women in a
patriarchal society has been culturally, not
biologically, produced.
12Roots of Feminism
- Patriarchy continually exerts forces that
undermine womens self-confidence and
assertiveness, then points to the absence of
these qualities as proof that women are naturally
self-effacing and submissive. - Example girls and math
13Roots of Feminism
- Patriarchal gender roles are destructive for men.
- Traditional gender roles dictate that men are
supposed to be strong - Physically powerful
- Emotionally stoic
- Men are not supposed to cry
- Unmanly to show fear or pain
- signs of weakness
- Shouldnt express sympathy for other men
14Roots of Feminism
- In a patriarchy, everything that concerns men
usually implies something (usually negative)
about women. - All behaviors forbidden to men are considered
womanish - inferior, beneath dignity of manhood
- Boys who cry labeled as sissies
- cowardly, feminine
15Roots of Feminism
- One of the most devastating verbal attacks for a
man to be compared to a woman. - REAL MAN requires that one hold feminine
qualities in contempt - Homosexuality
- feminine behavior
- American stereotype of typical male homosexual is
effeminate
16Roots of Feminism
- Whenever a patriarchy wants to undermine a
behavior, it portrays that behavior as feminine.
17Arguments Against Feminist Premises
- Western society has actually been structured to
protect women - from the brutalities of war and commerce
- allows them to be nurturers, mothers and
homemakers - Rather than exploiting or suppressing women, it
actually celebrates and cherishes them.
18Counter Argument by Feminists
- Assumes suppression and exclusion.
- If a woman is put on a pedestal, she cant do
much of anything up there. - Assumes women are weaker sex, needing protection.
- Assumes women are unable to compete with men.
- Disallows for the fact that some women are
physically and mentally stronger than some men.
19Roots of Feminism
- Men (either consciously or unconsciously) have
oppressed women, allowing them little or no voice
in the issues of their society - Political
- Social
- Economic
20Roots of Feminism
- Men have suppressed the female
- De-voiced
- Devalued
- Trivialized
- Men have defined what it means to be feminine
- Not giving voice or value to womens
- Opinions
- Responses
- Writings
21Roots of Feminism
- Men have made women the
- nonsignificant Other.
22Goal of Feminism
- To change degrading views of women so that all
women - will realize they are not a nonsignificant Other
- will realize that each woman is a valuable person
possessing the same privileges and rights as
every man
23Roots of Feminism
- Women must define themselves and assert their own
voices in the arenas of politics, society,
education, and the arts. - By personally committing themselves to fostering
such change, feminists hope to create a society
in which not only the male but also the female
voice is equally valued.
24Historical Roots of Feminism
- According to feminist criticism, the roots of
prejudice against women have long been embedded
in Western culture. - Biblical narrative
- fall of man is blamed on Eve, not Adam
- Ancient Greeks (Aristotle)
- The man is by nature superior, and the female
inferior and the one rules and the other is
ruled.
25Roots of Feminism
- According to feminist criticism, the roots of
prejudice against women have long been embedded
in Western culture. - Religious leaders Thomas Aquinas and St.
Augustine - women were merely imperfect men
- Spiritually weak creatures
- Possessed a sensual nature that lures men away
from spiritual truths, thereby preventing males
from attaining their spiritual potential
26Roots of Feminism
- According to feminist criticism, the roots of
prejudice against women have long been embedded
in Western culture. - Darwin (The Descent of Man 1871)
- women are of a characteristic of a past and
lower state of civilization. - Are inferior to men, who are physically,
intellectually, and artistically superior
27Roots of Feminism
- Opposition to patriarchal opinions against women
was not heard of until the late 1700s. - Mary Wollstonecraft
- A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792)
- Women must stand up for their rights and not
allow their male-dominated society to define what
it means to be a woman. - Women must take the lead and articulate who they
are and what role they will play in society. - Women must reject patriarchal assumption that
women are inferior to men.
28Roots of Feminism
- Not until the early 1900s (Progressive Era) that
the major roots of feminist criticism began to
grow. - Women gained the right to vote (Aug. 6, 1920)
- Women became prominent activists in the social
issues of the day - Health care
- Education
- Politics
- literature
29History of Feminist Criticism
- Virginia Woolf
- A Room of Ones Own (1919)
- Declares men have and continue to treat women as
inferiors. - The male defines what is means to be female and
controls the political, economic, social and
literary structures. - Hypothesizes the existence of Shakespeares
sister, equally as gifted a writer has he. - Gender prevents her from having a room of her
own - She cannot obtain an education or find profitable
employment because she is a woman. - Her innate artistic talents will therefore never
flourish, for she cannot afford a room of her own.
30History of Feminist Criticism
- Virginia Woolf
- A Room of Ones Own (1919)
- This kind of loss of artistic talent and personal
worthiness is the direct result of societys
opinion of women they are intellectually
inferior to men. - Women must reject this social construct and
establish their own identity. - Women must challenge the prevailing, false
cultural notions about their gender identity and
develop a female discourse that will accurately
portray their relationship to the world of
reality and not to the world of men.
31History of Feminist Criticism
- Virginia Woolf
- A Room of Ones Own (1919)
- Woolf believed that if women accepted this
challenge, Shakespeares sister can be
resurrected in and through women living today,
even those who may be washing up the dishes and
putting the children to bed.
32History of Feminist Criticism
- Simone de Beauvior
- The Second Sex (1949)
- foundational work of 20th century feminism
- Declares that French society (and Western
societies in general) are PATRIARCHAL, controlled
by males. - Like Woolf, believed that the male defines what
it means to be human, including, therefore, what
it means to be female. - Since the female is not the male, she becomes the
Other, finding herself a nonexistent player in
the major social institutions of her culture - Church
- Government
- Educational systems
33History of Feminist Criticism
- Simone de Beauvior
- The Second Sex (1949)
- Woman must break the bonds of her patriarchal
society and define herself if she wishes to
become a significant human being in her own right
and defy male classification as the Other. - Must ask herself, What is a woman?
- Answer must not be mankind (generic label
allows men to define women as relative to him,
not as herself.)
34History of Feminist Criticism
- Kate Millet
- Sexual Politics (1970)
- challenges the social ideological characteristics
of both the male and the female. - A female is born but a woman is created.
- Ones sex is determined at birth (male or female)
- Ones gender is a social construct created by
cultural ideals and norms (masculine or feminine)
35History of Feminist Criticism
- Kate Millet
- Sexual Politics (1969)
- challenges the social ideological characteristics
of both the male and the female. - Women and men (consciously and unconsciously)
conform to the cultural ideas established for
them by society. - Cultural norms and expectations are transmitted
through media television, movies, songs, and
literature. - Boys must be aggressive, self-assertive,
domineering - Girls must be passive, meek, humble
36History of Feminist Criticism
- Kate Millet
- Sexual Politics (1969)
- Women must revolt against the power center of
their culture male dominance. - Women must establish female social conventions
for themselves by establishing and articulating
female discourse, literary studies, and feminist
theory.
37History of Feminist Criticism
- Feminism in 1960s and 1970s
- Feminist critics began to examine the traditional
literary canon - Discovered examples that supported assertions of
Beauvoir and Millet - that males considered the female the Other
- male dominance and prejudice
38History of Feminist Criticism
- Feminism in 1960s and 1970s
- Feminist critics began to examine the traditional
literary canon - Stereotypes of women
- Sex maniacs
- Goddesses of beauty
- Mindless entities
- Old spinsters
39History of Feminist Criticism
- Feminism in 1960s and 1970s
- Feminist critics began to examine the traditional
literary canon - found male authors in established literary canon
Dickens, Wordsworth, Hawthorne, Thoreau, Twain,
etc. - Found few females achieved such status
- Roles of female, fictionalized characters were
limited to secondary positions - More frequently than not as minor parts within
story or as stereotypical images - Female scholars such as Woolf and Beauvior were
ignored - Works seldom referred to by male critics of
literary canon
40History of Feminist Criticism
- Feminism in 1960s and 1970s
- Feminist critics began to examine the traditional
literary canon - Asserted that the males who created and gained
prominence in canon assumed all readers were
male. - Most university professors were males
- Women reading such works were trained to read as
if they were males.
41History of Feminist Criticism
- Feminism in 1960s and 1970s
- Feminist critics began to examine the traditional
literary canon - Brought about existence of a female reader who
was affronted by the male prejudices abounding in
the canon. - Brought about questions concerning the male and
female qualities of literary form, style, voice,
and theme. - By 1970s, books that defined womens writings in
feminine terms flourished.
42History of Feminist Criticism
- Feminism in 1960s and 1970s
- Having highlighted the importance of gender
- Feminist critics began to rediscover literary
works authored by females that had been dismissed
or deemed inferior by their male counterparts,
unworthy to be a part of the canon. - Kate Chopins The Awakening (1899)
- Doris Lessings The Golden Notebook (1962)
43History of Feminist Criticism
- Criticism of the 1980s
- Elaine Showalter
- A Literature of Their Own (1977)
- Chronicles three historical or evolutionary
phases of female writing - Feminine phase (1840-1880)
- Feminist phase (1880-1920)
- Female phase (1970-present)
44History of Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- A Literature of Their Own (1977)
- Feminine phase (1840-1880)
- Writers accepted their role as female writers
- Wrote under pseudonyms
- Charlotte Bronte
- George Eliot
- George Sand
45History of Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- A Literature of Their Own (1977)
- Feminist phase (1880-1920)
- Female authors dramatized the plight of the
slighted woman - Depicted the harsh or cruel treatment of female
characters
46History of Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- A Literature of Their Own (1977)
- Female phase (1970-present)
- Feminist critics now concern themselves with
developing a particularly female understanding of
the female experiences in arts, including a
feminine analysis of literary forms and
techniques. - Uncovering of misogyny in male texts
47Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- A Literature of Their Own British Women
Novelists from Brontë to Lessing (1977) - Asserts that most criticism of novels by women
focuses only on a few novelists recognized as
major figures - Jane Austen
- The Brontës
- George Eliot
- Virginia Woolf
48Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- A Literature of Their Own British Women
Novelists from Brontë to Lessing (1977) - Asserts female authors were consciously and
deliberately excluded from the literary canon by
the male professors who established the canon
itself. - Example Olive Schreiner
- To fully understand the development of womens
literature, we must recognize the Schreiners as
well as the Austins.
49Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- Urges that the exclusion of the female voice must
stop. - what is needed is a feminist criticism that is
genuinely women centered.
50Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- Coined term gynocritics or gynocriticism process
of constructing a female framework for analysis
of womens literature to develop new models based
on the study of female experience, rather than to
adapt to male models and theories. - Gynocriticism
- Label given to the study of women as writers
- Subjects it deals with the history, style,
themes, genres, and structures of writings by
women
51Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- Gynocriticism
- Has provided critics with four models that
address the nature of womens writing - The biological
- The linguistic
- The psychoanalytic
- The cultural
52Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- Four models that address the nature of womens
writing - The biological model
- Emphasizes how the female body marks itself upon
a text by providing a host of literary images and
a personal, intimate tone.
53Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- Four models that address the nature of womens
writing - The linguistic model
- Concerns itself with the need for a female
discourse. - Investigates the differences between how women
and men use language. - Asserts that women can and do create a language
peculiar to their gender and addresses the way in
which this language can be utilized in their
writings.
54Linguistics
- Gilbert Gubar
- The War of Words (1988)
- a major campaign in the battle of the sexes is
the conflict over language and, specifically,
over competing male and female claims to
linguistic primacy (228). - Its not enough to challenge the way women have
been portrayed in literature must recognize that
language itself has been shaped by men in ways
that denigrate and alienate women.
55Feminist Criticism
- Elaine Showalter
- Four models that address the nature of womens
writing - The psychoanalytic model
- Based on an analysis of the female psyche and how
such an analysis affects the writing process. - Emphasizes the flux and fluidity of female
writings as opposed to male rigidity and
structure.
56- Elaine Showalter
- Four models that address the nature of womens
writing - The cultural model
- Investigates how the society in which female
authors work and functions shapes womens goals,
responses, and points of view.
57- By drawing attention to lesser known writers,
Showalter led the way for other feminist critics
to contribute to the reshaping of the literary
canon. - Zora Neale Hurston
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman
- Kate Chopin
- Susan Glaspell
58- In order to appreciate the merits of womens
writings, must reexamine our ideas about what
makes a literary work excellent or important. - Must not only reconsider individual works but
also entire genres of writing long dismissed s
inherently minor, popular, transient, and
feminine (DuBois, Feminist Scholarship) - 19th century sentimental fiction
59Stereotypical Criticism
- Gilbert Gubar
- Madwoman in the Attic the Woman Writer and the
Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (1979) - Analyze literature in relationship to the myths
created by men and challenge such myths. - those mythic masks male artists have fastened
over womans human face. - Passive, submissive angel
- Destructive, sinister monster
60- Judith Fetterly
- The Resisting Reader (1978)
- Women should resist the meanings that male
authors or female authors who have inherited
patriarchal values embed in their books. - A woman must read as a woman exorcising the male
mind that has been implanted in women.
61Stereotypical Criticism
- Judith Fryers The Faces of Eve Women in the
19th Century American Novel (1976) - Faces of Eve
- The temptress
- The American princess
- The Great Mother
- The New Woman
62Stereotypical Criticism
- Not all stereotypical criticism is negative with
the attack on works by male authors. - Annis Pratt examines healthier representations
(New Feminist Criticism) - Miriam Lerenbaum (Moll Flanders A Woman on Her
Own Account) - Defends Defoe as shedding a positive light on the
female character Moll.
63- Feminist critics also criticize critics they
consider to be sexist. - Phallic Criticism (Annis Pratt)
- Critics that look at and distort chauvinistic
interpretations of works either by men or women. - Nina Bayms Melodramas of Beset Manhood How
Theories of American Fiction Exclude Women
Authors - Scarlet Letter
- Critics who ignore literature by women.
- Carol Ohmanns Emily Bronte in the Hands of Male
Critics - Wuthering Heights
64- Some feminist critics have attempted to use
literature and criticism to promote social
change. - Carolyn G. Heilbrun (Reinventing Womanhood -1979)
- Makes literary criticism a part of her effort to
promote the struggle for female selfhood. - Toril Moi (Sexual/Textual Politics Feminist
Literary Theory 1985) - Feminist criticism can and should contribute to
social change - the principal objective of feminist
criticismhas always been political it seeks to
expose, not to perpetuate, patriarchal practices.
65Feminist Criticism
- No one critical theory of writing dominates
feminist criticism few theorists agree upon a
unifying feminist approach to textual analysis. - American textual, stressing repression
- British Marxist, stressing oppression
- French psychoanalytic, stressing repression
66Feminist Criticism
- Asserts that most of our literature presents a
masculine-patriarchal view in which the role of
women is negated or at best minimized.
67Feminist View
- Attempts to show that writers of traditional
literature have ignored women and have
transmitted misguided and prejudiced views of
them - Attempts to stimulate the creation of a critical
environment that reflects a balanced view of the
nature and value of women
68Feminist View
- Attempts to recover the works of women writers of
past times and to encourage the publication of
present women writers so that the literary canon
may be expanded to recognize women as thinkers
and artists and - Urges transformations in the language to
eliminate inequities and inequalities that result
from linguistic distortions.
69Questions for Analysis
- Is the author male or female?
- Is the text narrated by a male or female?
- What types of roles do women have in the text?
- Are the female characters the protagonists or
secondary and minor characters? - Do any stereotypical characterizations of women
appear? - What are the attitudes toward women held by the
male characters? - What is the authors attitude toward women in
society? - How does the authors culture influence his or
her attitude? - Is feminine imagery used? If so, what is the
significance of such imagery? - Do the female characters speak differently than
do the male characters? In your investigation,
compare the frequency of speech for the male
characters to the frequency of speech for the
female characters.