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English Pages 240 [264] Year 1968
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Ellmann
C712336
Thinking about women
PUBLIC LIBRARY FORT WAYNE AND ALLEN COUNTY, IND. ALLEN COUNTY EXTENSION DEFT.
ALLEN COUNTY
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THINKING ABOUT WOMEN
Thinking About Women MARY ELLMANN
Harcourt, Brace
& World,
Inc.,
new york
Copyright
All rights reserved.
No
©
1968 by
part of this publication
Mary Ellmann
may be
reproduced
or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
including photocopy, recording, or any information storage retrieval system, without permission in writing
and
from the publisher.
First Edition
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 67-20309
Printed in the United States of America
In
memory
of
Nora Donahue
C742,'?:J(;
Conknis
Preface:
An
Interview
I
•
Sexual Analogy
n
•
Phallic Criticism
ni
^
^ I ^27
Feminine Stereotypes
•
ix
^
55
Formlessness Passivity Instahiliiy
Confinement Piety
Materiality Spirituality
Irrationality
Compliancy
Two
Incorrigible Figures:
The Shrew and
IV
•
Differences in
V
•
Responses Index
^
^231
the
Witch
Tone 175
^
147
Preface:
The
An
Interview
book was discussed
general nature of this
an
in
in-
terview conducted, several months ago, at the National
Lake Norman, N. M.
Institute of Interviews,
now
venient to
all
to reproduce the
that follows.
Interviewer and
It
also
It
seems con-
exchange as a reader's guide
seems convenient to abbreviate
my name as
i
and me. M.E.
I.
Do you
need any particular environment in which to
work? ME.
room without a view, preferably a
like a
I
Oddly enough, Tve never worked front of our attic has a view,
back part I.
ME.
Do you I
wish
I
is
jammed with
you
I.
ME.
and then the
old toys.
need seclusion? could say Td been locked in a room.
in this
It's
My
pe-
work
way, deprived of pathetic circumstance.
Never mind, perhaps you have a
writer's costume.
Only a navy blue woollen bathrobe. An drab garment, I
The
in the attic. see,
destrian not to have a tyrannical husband. is,
closet.
just don't
I
effortlessly
hate answering the phone in
it.
But
have any faded dungarees or open-necked
sport shirts. They're for men. I.
ME. I.
They're for men?
They're for men. I
see.
you
Well, speaking of men, could you explain
are writing about
women? IX
why
PREFACE ME.
I
didn't
want
to overreach.
Right from the start
I
thought: ME, you must limit yourself to half of the
human I.
ME. I.
ME.
race.
Then you were not prompted by feminism? \
Please.
Oh. Feminism
out, isn't it?
is
Well, yes, in the they're practiced.
way
principles
Say a bride
all
go out before
gets locked in the bath-
room. The guests have gone home from the wedding, they've already forgotten their sanction of this event
—
^which, as
it
happens, hasn't quite happened.
Still,
people can't go on throwing rice forever. I.
ME.
But think of the poor bride. It's
better for her to
in the mirror I.
ME. I.
You I
I.
I.
ME. I.
No
You
I.
will
not offend you.
don't have a program for
own?
I
will
women?
program.
Ah! But perhaps you
will define the attitude of the
the gun, the ship and the helicopter?
Impossible. It's
been done.
A man has
done
it
for
men.
Indeed.
Then have you something edge of
ME.
a female program of your
know what word
woman toward ME.
door than to argue
phrase things peculiarly.
scarcely
No.
at the
about her right to get out.
Then you do not have
try again.
ME.
gnaw
human
You mean with Yes.
to contribute to our
knowl-
sexual responses?
wires and thermometers and
all.
PREFACE ME. I.
No. This
Now
fun, isn't it?
is
me,
tell
ME. I.
You make Forgive
though
I.
ME.
I
me once
this
this subject.
I
to cut
statistics
a personal matter
tistics I.
ME.
down
looks as
it
deplore this slipping.
gradually on
on
it?
which
My
willing to reveal to the public.
me
And
slipping.
is
work.
But have you studied the
You touch on
good deal of
again. Nonetheless, a
their status
applaud
women?
everything sound like a symposium.
work has been done on
ME.
your work con-
is
cerned with the status of American
my
I
am
of course
internist has
asked
consumption of
sta-
about American women.
Why? It's
can
sort of sad.
Say
I
women became
read that only nineteen Ameri-
orthodontists in 1962.
miliated, depressed.
cry easily.
I
It's
am
I
hu-
days before
I
think to be glad that so few wanted to be orthodontists, I.
ME.
I
do you see?
think so.
You
Perhaps. But
I
only
like
think
it's
statistics
worse than
by miscomprehension,
flicted
of success. that.
I
am
af-
the failures often seem
to me successes. For example, we know exactly how many American women interrupted their husbands'
anecdotes at dinner parties in 1966. Quite a few, as a matter of fact just to table.
count them
—204,648
is
wives. But of course
to say they
have
failed at the
This complicated thing, interruption,
quite simply bad.
And
yet
XI
all
dialogue, like
is
made
you and
PREFACE me, might be defined as the prevention of monologue.
And
think of the other guests
—how can we hope
that
they wanted to hear the husbands out? Perhaps these
who place the liveliness of the own favor with their husbandk
wives are sociahsts party before their I.
you might say yes or TVo
think perhaps
I
for a while
again.
ME.
Or
think of the
ideal unions
official successes.
I
am
afraid of the
toward which counselors propel
take an intolerable
and put them
in
man and an
intolerable
us.
You
woman
an apartment together, and then
they are both mature, and each
tries to
if
understand
the other's monstrous nature, a good marriage results. I.
ME.
It
cannot be wrong to urge understanding.
No,
it
must be
right in social work. But in novels, say,
misunderstanding reasserts
and one
parent,
silience, the
I.
feels
itself.
a grudging admiration for re-
admiration one might
which
all
Then
really,
ap-
Its resilience is
feel for a viral strain
the aspirin in the world won't eradicate.
you
relish
confusion
—or
even
sore
throats.
ME.
I
said
it
was a grudging admiration. There's an enor-
mous number admit
of opinions about
women, and
I
will
Tm impressed by the regularity and the intensity
with which they are expressed. Some are more plausible
than others, but their plausibility or implausibility
isn't so I.
ME.
much
the point.
It's
their reiteration.
Perhaps an example.
With
pleasure. In the novel
xu
Ihe Awakening by Kate
PREFACE Chopin, the
woman
annoyed when the man says
is
he won't fan himself because when you stop fanning
youVe
hotter than
you never fanned
if
Tennyson, doesn't
all.
like
man
saying something true or not doesn't
is
feel
It is
it?
a tiresome thing to say
feel deeply. Either
and evidently
tedious,
Now
I
statement
think Til cry.
self-sacrifice or is
much
which some people
they must say. People also say things like
have a natural capacity for
That
But whether the
sounds
matter.
I.
at
Women Women
possibly true, certainly
irresistible.
knew women
never
I
suffered
from such compliments, that they were tormented by praise.
ME.
You know,
a funny thing,
you look like
a tape recorder
yourself. Til bet you're married to a walkie-talkie. 1.
Women
always get personal.
If
you disagree with
them, they insult your wife.
ME.
If
I
am
were willing to play that game, which not, I'd say
men always
ME. I.
ME. I.
ME. I.
Which one
Law?
shall
Let's us
be abstract again,
never wanted to be anything
Then
think a thought now.
Very
well. It has crossed
Those
it.
is it?
Dear me.
many
you
benefited from Boyle's
Boyle's
it
I
If
out of
make
A busy little person like you can look
as
ME.
we have both
Surely
certainly
Law
hurt their feelings, they I.
I
get impersonal.
my
up for
herself.
we?
else.
mind
that there are just
opinions about men.
are central opinions, about
xiu
Humanity or Man-
— PREFACE women
kind. Opinions about
phenomenon, which
upon the
fluence
is felt
center.
always female, on the
are about an eccentric
some obscure
to exert
Or on
tides.
is
dogs, disturbing
the dogs' peace of mind. I.
in-
Like the moon, which
\
men
But then perhaps youil simply confess that
are
more curious than women. ME.
That
is
a possibility
men
any
they're right. Historically, at
some
correlation
And
often raise.
is
controlled,
who
or a puzzle to the one
perhaps
rate, there's
between authority and
soon as something
perhaps
curiosity.
As
becomes a problem
it
controls
it.
We're
all
un-
comfortably aware of the prurience with which the
Or
white racist speculates about the Negro.
mayor
in
say a
Milwaukee imposes a curfew. Then he
can't
who
are
forbidden to come out, are doing in their houses.
It's
stand not knowing what
the
way the most powerful
seem put
it
to
have the most
those people
all
governments, like our own,
spies.
But
don't
I
know why
so unpleasantly. Actually, this curiosity
redemptive.
It
suggests the one
still
I
must be
wants a connec-
tion with the other. I.
I
trust
you
are not saying that
all
men
are
mayors of
Milwaukee. ME.
You're
still
pouting, aren't
you?
It
was only a meta-
phor. I.
ME.
I
got the distinct impression
Nonsense. At
least
nonsense here
or Sweden. Lots of American
XIV
—or say
men
in
England
say American
men
— PREFACE And Tm not wouldn't dare. What to speak of other places. say about men and women in India? Food men any
don't feel like American trying
I
could
has
more.
I
the authority in starvation. Sexual politics and
all
sexual opinions, and
I
suppose sexuality
itself,
are
all
fringe benefits of eating. I.
But in the United States,
let's
say,
you would
put an end to tedious opinions about
ME.
like to
women?
I'm not sure. Imagine the tedium without them! Any-
way, they're not simply tedious. They're often bold I
mean
in their flights
like their
beyond embarrassment.
crazy proliferation too
opinions are sexual themselves. other and multiply
—
—
I
rather
in that sense, sexual
They mate with each
incessantly! Also, the
little
ones
look like the big ones. I've come to like watching them
bob
and out of books
in
—
novels, especially. Like
those goldfish that go endlessly in and out of their grottoes. I.
Tell me,
ME.
Connect ing
I
and tides?
I
dare you.
have neither the time nor the desire to study your
mind.
I
shall
ment than ME.
fish
my crabbed little mind with water now, flowstreams and all that. Go ahead. Do me a Molly
Bloom. I.
do you often think about
I
only say that you pretend more detach-
Perhaps. But since
words
—
you
believe
as the
I
feel.
am most
words they
interested in
pull out of
mouths,
not pretending to some detachment, some I.
And
the rest?
XV
women is
I
real.
as
am
PREFACE ME.
What
One
can
imagine an impossibly different world, in which
this
can
I
say? [A Qallic gesture here.]
kind of attention was diverted from other phenomenon.
They might
of belief, for a change.
—
that
I.
ME. I.
ME.
By
would divide
seven,
I
Or
all
women
like that.
to
some
A suspension
eight sexes instead of^^wo
available attention
by
four.
think.
We are discussing close attention, But close attention
is
I,
not short division.
a compliment, isn't it?
Compliments again! But what critical attention are the
if
fixed attention
and
same? Like those love poems
where the beloved's ugly hands or crooked teeth turn
up
in the
second stanza.
Of
loved the more for her defect
course she
—but
still,
is
presumably
there are those
damn teeth. Nothing can be looked at very long, that's why lovers fall asleep. And then so much attention is unloving all over. am thinking of the kind of attenI
tion the States.
English newspapers focus
Or
the
way
on the United
people at the zoo stare at cobras
or at the outrageous backsides of baboons. I.
We
have come a long
way now from
the topic of
women. ME.
On
the contrary.
We
are just beginning
XVI
it.
SEXUAL
ANALOGY
'pes. As long as the two basic equations can
be kept quite clear of each other, good
Even
if
art
place
is
an agreeable phenomenon.
as the
barley.
Men may
its
be wheat but,
of Bath noticed, even the Apostles fed well
And
but charms
considered superior to nature, nature in
is
Wife
can prevail.
will
on
then, nature sometimes not only supplements Self-consciousness, the advantage of
art.
which
people are ordinarily vain, seems occasionally burdensome;
and they then admire and envy what seems instead the natural, physical
and oblivious being
of children, of
women
Negroes. From
this
less
welcome
of others
in the twentieth
vie\s',
century than those of the com-
and
com-
of the
by
age)
.
The
constantly tries to prevent or combat the
person's sheer being. Others, then, less
societ>^, of
no revelations have been
plexity of children (to parents, supremacists felt,
of animals,
and, often in American
point of
plexity of Negroes (to white supremacists)
mind, Valen,'
—
who seem
mindful than himself, seem also to
to the person
live
more
easily,
happily, effortlessly. Being, Valery's Monsieur Teste calls
Madame Teste, incapable of
it)
instead of Emilie.
And as
childbirth (to those
seems the most natural and 61
least self-con-
:
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN scious of to
human
experiences,*
particularly the capacity
it is
which the praise of feminine being
The less,
two
subject to at least
when
attached.
is
celebration of thoughtless achievement qualifications.
own
the observer reconsiders his
periencing a revived gratification on
is,
The
nonethe-
first is
condition and, ex-
account, finds the
its
same supposed thoughtlessness of others contemptibly
Or
artless,
and
in that sense
directed achievements.
At
made
naive.
not comparable to designed and
very often, careful
this juncture,
differences, instead of similarities, will
be described between
the production of the child and the production, say, of
rhymed
verse.
A useful example of the workings of this much
argued issue occurs incidentally in an
article
by Milton
Himmelf arb
A
few years back
I
read a neo-feminist^s approving review of
another neo-feminist's book. the author that for a
The reviewer
woman,
being a mother. That puzzled
thought to
it,
I
*
It
of
and
in childbirth.
criticisms
is,
to
when
a
creative than
without having given
woman
A
little
closest the
much
human
bears a child, nur-
later
I
was looking
to suffer acute is
tion of pain fades quickly,
states
lapsing of ordinary interests, observations
one suspects, commonly exaggerated.
delivery because her hair
I
:
more
have a psychological study of women's
The
been known, for example,
bered.
is
and cares for him.
would be valuable
mind
me
said she agreed with
is
had assumed that about the
race can get to creation tures him,
a career
up
in curlers.
what
is
A woman
has
embarrassment throughout her Moreover, while the recollec-
said during the delivery
is
remem-
myself recall a shoppy discussion of various antiseptics, and
I
have known women who could mimic the manners and the remarks of obstetricians years after their children were
62
bom.
— FEMININE STEREOTYPES through the racks in a drugstore and came across a specimen
common
of a
—books
for adolescent girls
subliterary genre
about a young heroine with an interesting /creative job /career.
The
title
of the
How can being TV secretary?*
understood,
I
with being a
The
more
Secrelary.
Then
a mother compare in creativity
The phrase without having interesting.
It
with one hand, while
The confusion
given
much thought
TV
is
secretaries are cuffed with the
of sexual function
and personal worth
seems inevitably to coarsen judgment and
Whites expands
it
always patted on the head
restrict choice:
the same intellectual vulgarity that brushes off the Phyllis
to
precisely with this air of vague
is
benevolence that maternity
other.
TV
li^hite,
predictable slur of the neo-feminist reference can be
ignored. is
book was Phyllis
easily to snigger at the
little
unmarried
or the impotent and, particularly in the United States, to persecute the homosexual. At the same time, this idealization of childbirth obscures the distinction between involuntary
and voluntary achievement which we depend upon cribing
any achievement
women,
as creative.
When,
as for Indian
the sequence of conception, birth and starvation
invariable, this distinction remains clear;
act (at once voluntary
the
means of birth
society, does
and
and the
socially beneficial)
is
63
in giving
race can get to creation"?
* Milton Himmelfarb, "Varieties of Jewish Experience," p. 59.
creative
American
anyone seriously believe that women,
human
is
to procure
control. But even in middle-class
birth, get ''the closest the
July 1%7,
in des-
Commentary,
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN Closer than Bach, whose wives between them produced
When we
twenty children?
think of our primary metaphor
of creation, God's creation of the world,
world
and
an idea
as
we
think of the
His head (not as a foetus in His belly)
in
of His deliberately choosing to bring this idea into ex-
That
istence.
tellectual
and
is,
our concept of creation
self-directed.
out of Adam's rib
He
surgeon.
:
God
Adam
is
plays the
profoundly
is
in-
formed out
of dust.
Eve
sculptor
and the
first
first
begins Art and Science. In the same way, Vladi-
mir Nabokov speaks of the creation of the novel as a blas-
phemy,
a small but insolent ambition for divinity.
There
nancy and
childbirth,
to befuddle the
cal process for nine
and most creativity.
but they
issue
Women may want to rejoice in
are,
I
to value preg-
think, slowly persuaded
every sense)
(in
be involved
with creativity.
in a particular physiologi-
months: some enjoy the process
its
itself
conclusion. But not on the grounds of
The astonishment
of childbirth
able result of having done no in a
women
are, of course, reasons for
prolonged vagary of
its
more than indulge the body
own
design.
And
tached impression of uterine accomplishment at once, the child appears
the unimagin-
is
is
even brief
this de:
almost
always to have been a separate
and complete being, whose body cannot be seen
as the prod-
uct of cellular multiplication. In this sense, prenatal develop-
ment
is
known but not
believed.
opposite, a moral conviction
A hubris of childbirth is the
beyond
natural verification.
marks an extraordinary schism between the
body
in
which the
self
conscious workings of
self
It
and the
acquires conscious pride in the un-
its
container.
64
FEMININE STEREOTYPES Another common deterrent to templation of feminine ''being'' tive purity in this
that
women
They
full
enthusiasm in the con-
itself
denies any such primi-
form of being.
It
infect their nature, not
appear, after
is
generally suspected
with art but with
artifice.
to partake of at least a bastard self-
all,
consciousness, which leads them
into contrived postures,
deceptions and pretenses. These are thought of as almost ineradicable blemishes it
upon a fundamental
and
sometimes indicated that one of the beauties of the
is
primary natural function, childbirth, tion of utter artlessness.
woman. So Freud, on
it is
is its
moment
At the
emerges from the vagina, a
artlessness,
temporary restora-
that the child's
head
possible for everyone to trust
the day of his
first child's birth,
wrote his wife's mother: I
have never seen her so magnificent in her simplicity and
goodness as on
this critical occasion,
which
after all doesn't
permit any pretences.*
A second consistent quality repeated effort to
of feminine stereotypes
move women
a premised, though indefinable,
in
two
human
directions center.
is
the
away from
These move-
ments, like those of an autistic child, perhaps signify no
more than obsessive result in
an odd effect of hoisting up or lowering down, as
elevators
move from
again,
day
all
attention to a single subject. But they
the basement to the roof and back
long, or as pieces of clothing, once they are
bought, must steadily alternate between being dirtied and cleaned. In this sense, opinions of *
7he
Letters of
Sigmund 7reud,
p. 224.
65
women
reflect
two
volatile
:
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN by
impulses, to set things apart
them ideal
—and then
distinction but also to return
to less than even the
common
stock.
as every feminine virtue implies a feminine vice
and
An
seems formulated only to be regretted or begrudged,
frigidity, intuition
domination)
irrationality,
was Emerson's impression
It
.
was
volatility
and
especially prominent in
(chastity
motherhood and that this
American
life
form of
—
to the
extent, as he suggested, that election to office in the United States might
be looked upon as a mane's most
reliable guar-
antee of impeachment.
Perhaps the most extreme range, between elevation and descent, in feminine stereotypes
lies
between a statement
like
Addison's:
Women
in their nature are
men; whether
more
delicate,
it
much more gay and joyous
be that their blood
and
is
more
their animal spirits
than
refined, their fibres
more Hght;
vivacity
is
the gift of v^omen, gravity that of men.
And the Marquis ...
I
de Sade's observation
believe that the flesh of
female animals,
is
women,
as the flesh of all
necessarily very inferior to that of the male
species.*
All that links the
two
is
the unlikelihood of ever proving
either one. Sade, of course,
seems extraordinarily rude
:
one
does not want to be eaten, but being eaten, one does not *
From
"Juliette" in
7he
!Marcfuis de
Sade (An Essay by Simone de
Beauvoir and Selections from His Writing, Chosen by Paul Dinnage),
(London, John Calder, 1962),
p. 171.
66
:
FE
want
M
I
N'
I
NE
STEREOTYPES
be thought an inferior dish. At the same time, a
to
sentimental exaggeration of virtues, like Addison's, for in an equal exaggeration of defects
upon
body
a close examination of the
delicate spirit resides.
porary. Swift,
who
was, after
It
—
in
all,
paid
is
usually discovered
which the
light
and
Addison's contem-
focussed for horror upon the Brobding-
nagian nurse's breast (rather than, say, the Brobdingnagian butler's buttocks)
Does Celia vivacitv',
principle,
and who asked that portentous question.
shit? (Yes, competently.
Hence her gayet>% her
her refined blood.) Just as on the same seesaw all
sexoial diseases are
named
for Venus,
It is
really
this effect of alternation, the sheer coexistence of irrecon-
cilable opinions,
which breeds
one of definition so much
up and down
erratic.
impression
is
not
movement
are not, however, entirely
TTiey involve at least t\vo fixed moral judgments.
first is
that
women
their ideal condition
When
The
in a sport called Definition.
Tlie directions of
The
dissent.
as of the subject's being tossed
is
unfortunately are
attained
his sister-in-law, Marj.'
by
rising
women, and
that
above themselves.
Hoganh, died
at seventeen,
Dickens praised her character She had not a
single fanlt,
and was
in life almost as far
the foibles and vanir>- of her sex and age as she
is
above
now
in
Heaven.*
On
the other hand,
their ideal
condition
men is
are not
attained
* Letters of Charles Dickens, edited
men without by
effort,
and
their becoming,
and
by Madeline House and
Storey (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1965), p. 263.
67
G.'-ahani
:
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN (with luck) remaining, simply men.
It is
by
this route that
a perverse appetite for unpleasant experiences, at least in the lives of others,
develops: various regimens
wet sleeping bag, going
commonly
'My Secret
abysmal
academy,
said to ''make a man'' out of a
presumably has
tion too, of course, In
to a military
first
Life, for
etc.)
are
man. But copula-
this goal,
among
others.
example, at the conclusion of an
performance (which involves the kindest and
most patient cook crows, ''Now
(sleeping in a
I
am
in
a
London
man
!''
at the time), the protagonist
an index of grimness
It is
work, however, that copulation
is
still
at
the only shared, innoc-
uous and more entertaining than competitive experience
which
is felt
to
have the desired
effect of virilism.
These two variant conditions of clarified
can perhaps be
ideal
by diagram
Super-sexual IDEAL
^^ WOMEN = DEFECT
MEN = IDEAL Sub-sexual
A third consistent pattern is ties.
This
feel
some
is
DEFECT
that of complementary quali-
perhaps the pattern toward which everyone can
cordiality, since
it
shows an understandable desire
for sexual order as well as a pretty confidence that balance
and economy actually not, cannot,
prevail.
The
feeling
is
that there
must
be waste by duplication, that the complementary
nature of the male and female reproductive systems must
68
—
:
FEMININE STEREOTYPES have
intellectual
point of view,
men
and women eyes
would be ears,
and emotional
from
parallels. Ideally,
this
should have ears (to hear lectures with)
(to see trinkets with)
organs which, unlike
sufficiently defined as ''those
cannot take in sound/'
which case eyes
in
,
One might
in that
way
avoid
the disturbing sense of overlapping and disorder which, as things are,
must constantly be warded
off
by
assertions to
the contrary. For example, Otto Weininger established, at least to his
own
satisfaction
(in
1904), that blood trans-
fusions should be carried out only within each sex: since all cells
of the female
in the individual
body were
male system, as
female, their being set free in all social systems,
would
The complementary impulse
cause an immediate internecion.
seems particularly strong in those,
Weininger, whose
like
chief sources of anxiety are mobility, diversity, fluctuation
Keats's ''negative capability'' of the poet.
Such anxiety must
urge a uniform commitment to fixed characteristics, an insistence
upon the tidy and immutable
properties of a reality
which, as Bertrand Russell has said, suggests to others only the "higgledy-piggledy"
I
think the universe
is
all
spots
and jumps, without unity,
without continuity, without coherence or orderliness or any of the other properties that governesses love.
may be small,
an
illusion,
but
if it exists, it
The
external world
consists of events, short,
and haphazard. Order, unity, and continuity are human
inventions, just as are catalogues * Bertrand Russell,
7he
Scientific
and encyclopaedias.*
Outlook
(New
York,
W. W.
Norton,
1931), pp. 94-95. Russell assigns the appetite for order to clergymen
and
journalists as well
—
i.e.,
to the sanctimonious
69
on the one hand and
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN
The though
fourth consistent pattern effect
its
is
to disturb
dividual speaker
moment.
is
not,
related to the third,
and confuse what,
might be the limpidity of the tend to be not merely what
is
third. In the fourth,
men
is
and
woman
forceful, the
women
what the
are not, but
and even what he
man
is
quite
oblique and fugitive.
But in the fourth pattern, the woman's nature
may be
The
dispassionate sense, for example,
women
Defoe's judgment of
temper of
all
tive
his observations
—upon
is
woman
—stones
—the basic impression
If
the
first
seems at any moment lusty,
:
seems moral, the second invariably ascribed to
is
sluttish.
women,
some circumstances, a is
one of the
itself.
the second seems prudish but at another
curly hair
is
temperament, single and passing moods can
govern contrasts.
defect in
upon
are brought in to
stony
generally vindictive temper of the novel
And beyond
the plague as
in a novel like Philip Roth's
Qood, which attempts to describe a vindic-
and merciless young
hint that she
of
seems consistent with the
Moll Flanders. Similarly now,
When She Was
de-
who
termined largely by the temperament of the person describes her.
in-
not at any given
In the third pattern, let us say, the
steadily direct
left to itself,
like
Even
moment,
if
a quality
the
first
which
is
compliancy, will be a
virtue in others, rather as
sometimes chic, sometimes not, but always
curly. the sensational on the other. Clearly, both states of
nent
in the
propagation of feminine stereotypes.
70
mind are
also promi-
FEMININE STEREOTYPES The
sense of this erratic direction
by mood,
in
an area
formerly governed (with some startling exceptions) by a fairly
At
benevolent certitude, seems
least since the
now
particularly strong.
Second World War, the work of assigning
men and women,
stereotypes, not only to racial groups but to
has of course continued, but in a markedly distressed and
even demoralized manner. The more stable sexual stereotypes of, say, the mid-nineteenth century provided tranquility for those
some has
who
of those
now
who framed them and
A
bore them.*
some
perhaps also for
perceptible disturbance
replaced that calm, in relation to
all
contrasts but
especially in relation to the former contrast of strength
weakness and
to
its
former reconciliation
:
and
the tolerable ex-
Among
change of male protection for female helplessness.
the varieties of suffering which have always been abundantly available, the suffering of
children
was
men
as protectors of
traditionally considered the
women and
most
severe,
therefore the most valid proof of sexual superiority.
and
What-
ever revision of this point the peaceful society might suggest, the always present threat of roles, for
off
war denied. This balance
which everyone must
feel nostalgia,
was thrown
by the Second World War, which replaced
appalling equality in suffering. In the atomic
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and
* In TAiddlemarch
,
for example,
in the
George
Eliot
murder
of
it
with an
bombing
of
of six million
remarks on Mrs. Garth's
hearty endorsement of the "principle of subordination":
"On
ninety-
nine points Mrs. Garth decided, but on the hundredth she was often
aware that she would have carrying out her
own
to
principle,
perform the singularly
and
to
71
make
difficult
herself subordinate."
task of
THINKING ABOUT Jewish men,
manner and
women and for the
ability
was
children in Europe, in the same
established, before
contrasts of strength
died like
women
concept of mutual voliier-
which the
traditional sexual
and weakness, courage and
authority and subservience
The Japanese
distinctions in age,
were equally responsible for being
modem
and human), the
MEN
O
same cause, without
sex or responsibilit\^ (all alive
U"
of Hiroshima should seem to us to have since
less sleep of early
many
of
them died
morning, and
in the light, rest-
sleep (like night itself)
all
—
might be stereotyped as feminine pacific, unresisting.
who
thoughtless,
passive,
But within the same daylight, masculine
ethic of aggressive action,
Jews
timidity,
became meaningless.
died awake?
what
It is
is
to be said of the European
some
possible for
critics, like
Bruno Bettelheim, to deplore their not countering the aggression of the Nazis with aggression of their own.
(we must always say yielded] to life
despair, odiers
on passive and subservient terms. But
sible to
suppose that the ethic
Some
itself
it is
yielded
dung
to
equally pos-
died at that time, ex-
tended into monstrosity by those whose minds and bodies
were equipped achronism by
modem
to kill indiscriminately,
as an-
This ethic collapsed before the
their victims.
exigencies
and exposed
which the Jews faced and has not applied
convincingly to those which have since prevailed. Starvation, racial injustice
to
and atomic
fear are also
which monosexual responses are
American engagement
in
mutual exigencies
irrelevant.
warfare has, so
It is
true that
far, retained
a
conventional masculinity (and so President Johnson retains the "our boys" rhetoric of
World War 72
I).
But
this
rde
FEMININ'E STEREOTYPES would as
disintegrate before the
bombing
of American cities,
we bomb. Amer-
has disintegrated in those places which
it
women
ican
perience of
are
still
divorced, then, from the personal ex-
war which American men
upon the women of other intend to
kill
Most
countries.
soldiers
must
only other soldiers, but their weapons erase
and
age.
It is
are ''neo-feminists."
It is
not that they refuse pro-
distinctions in both sex
women
are obliged to confer
tection or prefer
napalm
not that Vietnamese
no
to a double standard, but that
one can provide protection for them. In
consequence of such changes, inherited Western stereo-
and
are weakened,
t>^pes
forced to be frantic. feisty in the it
their continued
When Norman
men and languid women, one form
in
which
it
endorsement
is
Mailer talks about
touches the past
—hardly
persists in bourgeois enclaves, but as
drags at a mind attempting to reconcile an acute apprecia-
mas-
tion of the present with a passionate attachment to a
culine ideal.
The
difficulty,
and perhaps the
futilit}^
of such
a reconciliation account for Mailer's always thrashing qualit>^
At
his best,
he has a desperate bravado, a last-standness
which becomes a way of extracting some ting blood,
vitality, like clot-
from defunct opinions.
Ordinarily, the chief
tedium. As the
mark
body comes
of sexual stereotypes
their
is
to sexual adulthood, the
mind
seems to exchange spontaneity^ hke a secondary^ innocence, for conviction. But a surfeit
is
felt
increasingly with set
formulations, and a hunger renewed for idiosyncratic isolated
phenomena. Both help
unsuccess of the
realistic
and
to account for the present
novel whose main source of energy
:
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN has been, and
still is,
psychosexual comparison and contrast.
In turn, the reader recognizes the patterns of distinction,
and
closes the book.
Even various degrees of
plausibility
within the stereotypes no longer hold an audience for them.
Most seem ready
up the chance (now,
to give
is how it is'' to avoid the how they always say it is." The original
at
any
rate,
diminished) of 'This
certainty of
'This
exhilaration
is
of the chance slides irresistibly, through repetition, into banality.
I Formlessness The
impression of women's formlessness underlies the
familiar,
and often most generous, acknowledgement
superficial form.
It is
of course a physiological impression,
and the sexual analogy
The and
flesh of less
is
(as
transparent: soft body, soft mind.
Sade would put
it)
muscular than that of men. Pinched,
And
easily.
women
if it is
is less it
impressionable, the impalpable
maintain even so lax and careless a hold upon does. There, in the mind,
Solid ground
The
is
masculine, the sea
all is is
liquid
resistant
bruises
be not only beyond pinching but beyond form.
body
of their
more
mind must It
cannot
itself as
the
and drowning.
feminine.
chief consequence of liquidity
is
formless utterance
thoughts run out of women. In Molly Bloom's soliloquy, for
74
FEMININE STEREOTYPES example, thinking and menstruating are similar and concom-
She can no more govern the
itant processes.
by sentence
first,
structure or punctuation, than she can the second. Since
Joyce, in fact, the omission of these civilized impediments
has become standard in the representation of feminine thought. Sartre applies the technique to a Lesbian in his short story Intimacy, but he
independently clever:
is
He
loves me, he doesn't love
my
appendix in a
feeling me, but
touch
if
my
bowels,
if
they showed him
he wouldn't recognize
glass,
it,
he's always
they put the glass in his hands he wouldn't
he wouldn't think "that's hers," you ought to love
it,
we
them because we
don't love
aren't used to them,
the
them; the
starfish
we
if
way we saw our hands and arms maybe we'd
saw them
all
Maybe
of somebody, the esophagus, the liver, the intestines.
love
must love each other better than we do. They
on the beach when there's sunlight and they poke
stretch out
out their stomachs to get the air and everybody can see them; I
wonder where we could
More
stick ours out,
through the navel.
often, repetitions of the effect are fairly dismal
example, the
letter written
by Elena Esposito
—
for
in Mailer's
7he Beer Park: .
.
And
.
cause so
much
him not and
I
would haunt
I
that
I
had the
worry, that
to
moment
thought
kept saying to myself that
I
was going
but the I
then did
if I
was
I
know what
I
to I
Collie
feeling I
make
I
I
couldn't die be-
began to bother
and
this
had
to call
him up and
wouldn't do anything to bother him, it
a nice quiet sophisticated
little call
was
terrified,
heard his voice on the phone
talking to
thought, but
me tell
I
my
doctor or to
started screaming at
75
I
St.
Peter,
him
.
.
I
.
don't
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN upon the woman named Doris
or the soliloquy forced in
Mollis
Hemingway's 7o yiave and Jlave 'Not:
...
wish that luminol would work.
I
shouldn't have really gotten so tight.
way
can help the
am
that.
now
night and can't sleep
all
much
of that
suppose
damned
and then sometimes
it
I
stuff
I
he
IS
it,
a bitch I'll
I'll
am
isn't,
really,
Servile.
if
I
he here take too
day tomorrow
Oh,
well,
I
he
is
.
.
and
I
didn't
want
to,
but
tion,
and I'm the one that cannot go
.
most amorphous
of the time too.)
Hemingway simply
is
lying
awake
in bed.
articles of furniture in the
And
And
for
is
in
Molly Bloom's menstrua-
substitutes Doris Hollis's masturbahis malice for Joyce's
good
yet even with so fine a model to follow,
Hem-
tion, rather as
temper.
I
sweet, no he's not, he's not even
house, are favored in the stereotype. Sartre's Lesbian
bed most
I'll
might as
I'm sweet, yes you are, you're lovely,
Like Molly Bloom, this Doris
(Beds, as the
all
I
you do? What can you do but go
here, I'm here, I'm always here
away, no, never,
awfully
if
even though, even though, even anyway, oh,
sweet, no he
I
but
go crazy and
feel
oh, you're so lovely, yes, lovely,
am, now
one
all right,
feel frightful.
hate to but what can
ahead and do
He
No
won't put you to sleep and anyway
be cross and nervous and well.
Eddie, really.
they're built but getting tight has nothing to
do with
I
Damn
It isn't fair really.
he substitutes
ingway remains implausible. Quite ludicrously, the character's
phrases, even in her most private circumstances, are
trapped in the unmistakable rhythm of phrases.
76
all
Hemingway's own
FEMININE STEREOTYPES Joyce's indulgence
Hemingway's attempt lery's
Madame
more common
is
to scourge
Emilie Teste,
Molly Bloom,
it.
like
Va-
warmth and sympathy:
all
is
to the stereotype than
one could no more disapprove of their liquidity than disapprove of
warm
baths. Oasis,
by her husband
called
priest, is a desert.
And
Madame
—whose
Teste
sometimes
is
mind, according to her
Sartre's character, too,
is
as affec-
Moreover, these
tionate
and vulnerable
swirling
and disordered sensibilities will sometimes suddenly
manage a
as she
small force, either of
They conform when
good sense or
to the masculine
pocketbooks, ridiculous jumbles Teste,
witless.
is
she
is
not Oasis,
is
of
humor.
conception of women's things
of
(as
Madame
apt to be 7hing] out of
which, to everyone's surprise and pleasure, the owners sometimes fish up exactly
what
is
needed
—a throat lozenge,
a
safety pin, a telephone number.
however, the same stereotype
In criticism,
employed critic
pejoratively.
himself
is
is
almost always
persists there,
but as a defect. The
by
crystalline purposes
presently possessed
of precision, clarity critic
It
is
and firmness. Arnold's notion that the
should ''undulate" with whatever work he considers
quite
demode.
It
can be contrasted, for example, with
Norman
Podhoretz's remark that the book reviewer properly
receives
new books with
undulate with suspects undulating
by
suspicion.
One
does not wish to
or, for that matter,
approve of their
themselves. Consequently, a distaste for any
indication of temperamental yielding or
accommodation
often raised to the level of critical premise: writers
show
firmness, resistance, inflexibility.
77
It is
on
is
must
this premise,
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN out of
all
conceivable premises, that
Hochman S.
in
we
Commentary, that Kafka
is
by Baruch
are told,
a better writer than
Y. Agnon:
Within the psychic smog of Kafka's world there
is
a tensed,
even compulsive will to be, to achieve, to escape. Kafka's obsession with his father, with authority in general, in its clinical baldness, but out of
it
is
unpleasant
there seems to
grow a
tenacity of will, and a counter-fixity of guilt. Such tension largely absent in
Agnon. In psychological terms,
is
his characters
are obsessed not with the father, but with the mother, and the result
is
a propensity to undergo Hfe in a labile, feminine
mode.*
The
certainty here of the
mode
in
which experience should
be met, and the unqualified insistence upon characteristic of the stereotypal imagination.
influences
and
pop
Labile,
in
and out
like Fair
fixities,
The
are
parental
and Cloudy, Tenacious
on what Mr. Hochman would probably
call
a
psychic barometer.
2. Passivity But to return to the
flies,
I
like to think of those
that hatch out at the beginning of winter, within
* Baruch
Hochman, "Agnon's Quest," Commentary, December
p. 50.
78
1966,
F E
M
I
N'
doors, and die shortly after.
and
fluttering in the
STEREOTYPES
NE
I
You
see
them crawling
warm comers, pmiy,
sluggish,
torpid, mute.
—Samuel
Beckett, jSiolloy
Like formlessness, the stereotype of passivity
ened by a physiological impression
—now
and torpidity
tive horizontality, atonality
is
of the of
strength-
compara-
women. How-
despite the determinism which physiology must imply,
ever,
passivity
not condoned.
is
lethargy should be avoided.
It
felt
is
Some
that this unavoidable
alternative activity, in des-
ignated areas, has always been recommended. In the Tal-
mud, even the
rich wife
was
to take
work, for fear of her otherwise
some part
in
household
falling into promiscuity or
morbidity, the two irregularities
(first
of the body, then of
which constitute permanent exceptions
the mind)
to the
rule of passivity.
Preventive exercises, however, have been intricately qualified
and are
still
much
debated. There
is
really only general
agreement that actions of conjugal relevance should be encouraged.
And
even these actions are
least as far as action
United
States,
is
mummies.
seem
paralytic.
in sheets
It is
in the
They
and wheeled on
disappear, carts, like
who emerges, upright, boy." And yet childbirth
the doctor
calm, flecked with blood: "It's a will proceed,
itself,
so locked in the concept of male ''attend-
women, wrapped
(the other)
be passive, at
can be passive. Childbirth
ance'' or ''delivery"' as to
these
felt to
and even end, according
inine muscular contractions
to the pace of fem-
whether or not
79
it
is
attended.
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN (Customarily, the engaged obstetrician
may be
though he emergence
in
crowning.)
It is
and
initiative
their effort
is
is
paid his fee, even
backing out of his garage, a birthlike
moment
curiously
called
in recognition of the incontrovertible
energy
itself,
at
shown on
the
so
by women,
these rare occasions
that
called labor.
In childbirth, passivity
swept, willy-nilly, into activity.
is
But some study has also been given to those situations in
which passivity
tant of these situations
now famous
One
yields voluntarily.
was
described
first
most impor-
by Freud,
envy for passivity
substitution of penis
central characteristic of the female.
And
in his
as the
to this first active
he subjoined a second and related one of shame.
principle,
The
of the
active core of
shame had not previously been described.
Since shame prompts hiding and since, once hidden, the
shamed person
is
supposed to lapse into immobility, the
energy of the emotion had escaped But as he explained, nature
itself
was
the genital deficiency of the female, hair as a
means
of hiding
it.*
all
still
more
effectively.
visual opinion of is
embarrassed by
and devised her pubic
This
is,
means
again, a
at least
of hiding them-
more moral than
a mole's view of Givenchy, but
it
undeniably an affirmation of feminine industry. It is
*
women,
first
Then women, capable
of taking a hint, invented weaving as a selves
but Freud's notice.
even one of the happier affirmations. Generally, the
The purpose
of
male pubic hair was not,
by Freud. Some other students a visual emphasis upon the
to
my
knowledge, explained
of the subject, however, have suggested
genitalia, of
orders.
80
both the sufficient and deficient
FEMININE STEREOTYPES motives which are acknowledged to bring about a substitution of activity for passivity are less edifying, or less pathetic,
than shame. Bad temper, for example,
is
women from
is
their
customary torpor, as
known
to rouse
the desire to dis-
turb someone else's torpor. For the purposes of scolding or interruption, the ively to
life.
A
woman
capable of coming quite excess-
is
character in
Dutourd remarks upon
this
7he
perates them.''
Love by Jean
metabolic reversal as though
were a norm: ''Women love occupation leads nowhere.
Jiorrors of
be occupied, even
to
The
inactivity of the
The key words
are even
if
if
it
the
male exas-
the occupation
leads nowhere: passivity yields to senseless activity. Either senseless or exasperating.
It is
known
that
when they
when they
are least occupied,
habitually,
when women become aware
guise of cogitation, they are seized tion.
It
activity,
is
by
men
think best
are passive
—and
of this artful dis-
the impulse of disrup-
then that they plunge into aimless but noisy
such as vacuuming the rug.
Feminine passivity
is
closely related to
Negro apathy.
In
both cases, having restricted the participation of the group, the observer finds that inactivity teristic.
is
an innate group charac-
According to the same sequence of event and
pretation, the person
who
grieves for the death of his parent
or his child should find himself described
brious
by
nature.
inter-
Women and Negroes
by
others as lugu-
are also linked in the
stereotypes of frivolity and fecklessness, respectively.
The
congruity of these with those of passivity and apathy
81
is
in-
the
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN cost of asserting the radical irresponsibility of both groups.
That
is,
Negro has appeared
the American
in the past to
be
devoid, shockingly devoid, of energetic and serious concern
and economic values
for those social, political
did not share. But now,
when
his previous
in
which he
apathy has de-
veloped into open resentment, the Negro develops simultaneously a brand-new stereotype, in the making now, of
Through some Dar-
antisocial or insurrectionary violence.
winian caprice, innate characteristics of social (rather more than of sexual) groups undergo quite sudden mutations.
3. Instability
At
least
two
reconciliations of this stereotype with that of
passivity are possible. sorts, the passive
divided into two tinction
(1)
and the
moods
Women
are divided into
hysterical.
(T)
woman
is
or responses. But in turn, the dis-
between mood and response
hysterical response,
Each
two
is
important.
In
a
the person indicates her connection,
nervous but actual, with external event. Sylvia Plath writes her
poem
''Cut'' after
she has cut herself:
What a thrill— 'My thumb instead of an onion. But in the mood, which hysteria
is
is
the
more associated with women,
generated from within, like a hormone, and
82
little
FEMININE STEREOTYPES or no connection with external event
is
acknowledged.
In general, the feminine psyche suggests an extreme internality to others, like that of a ship in a bottle. Sealed off,
the psyche undergoes various but obscure glandular changes,
which create a semblance of reactions fact oblivious to
On
it.
to reality but are in
a similar basis, Freud
and Wilhelm
Fliess tried, unsuccessfully, to define the significance of the
menstrual numbers 23 and 78
whole.* So, hysteria
still,
surely this arithmetic of the
:
some
uterus must be the clue to
larger arithmetic of the
one might easily reconcile passivity and
by menstrual analogy:
the being shuffles about for
several weeks; then suddenly, senselessly, gathers ergies for
an eruption of violent temper.
This alternation novel.
Back
employed
typically
is
to China.
while the wife
down
*
Petri sherry.
manic
ance
sits at
is,
gear,
home on
On
in Leslie Fiedler's
The husband moves about town
day having experiences, each a
to
en-
its
little
model
of authenticity,
the living-room sofa slurping
his return, she shifts
and makes a deplorable
as usual, related to the
Though, as Ernest Jones remarks
all
from depressive
Her
scene.
disturb-
problems of conception.
in connection with Fliess,
no regular
patterns of psychic periodicity have been determined for either sex, the
idea
is still
casually employed in literary criticism. John
Weightman,
for
example, refers to a presumably clear distinction between the psychological
"receptivity" of "female" homosexuals
women, which
is
and
the receptivity of
"part of a physiological cycle." In his sexual ethic, ac-
ceptance of the male partner ("submission")
is
less
degrading
if
it
is
periodically imposed rather than psychologically chosen. ("Black Chivalry,"
T^ew Jork "Review
of Books,
August
83
24, 1967, p. 8.)
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN Years of disappointment account for the sherry, in turn the sherry accounts for a tardy success: a student of her hus-
band's has impregnated her without her being entirely conscious of the effective procedure. Hence, her hysteria
merely her
way of bringing the
In fact, in bringing
any
:
it is
news.
sort of news,
these same states of mind. Elizabeth
women
bring only
Hardwick disagreed on
one occasion with Frederick Crews' estimate of Edmund
Wilson a quintessentially mental entanglement, one would :
have thought. But Mr. Crews' rebuttal was brief and, he
seemed confident,
sufficient: in disagreeing
with him. Miss
Hardwick had been hysterical* Stephen Spender has similarly
clarified
the
mysterious
quality
of
Sylvia
Plath's
poetry:
One
does not think of Clytemnestra as a hysteric: one thinks of
her as hysterical for very good reasons, against which she warns. Sylvia Plath would have agreed with Wilfred a poet can do today
that
''all
her
warning
is
more
is
to warn." But being a
shrill,i
penetrating,
Owen
woman,
visionary
than
Owen's. Owen's came out of the particular circumstances of the trenches, and there
is
nothing to
make
—
had not been on the Western Front which
his nose
was rubbed
one about anything
and a quiet
poet.
at
With
all.
the
us think that
mud and
if
he
blood into
—he would not have warned anyHe would
have been a nice chap
Sylvia Plath, her femininity
is
that her
hysteria comes completely out of herself, and yet seems about * ?X^OMEN Johnson's criticism of Shakespeare, the most natural and
now
innocent (we would say
naive or subjective or effe-
minate) statements of personal reaction witches in CMacbeth
—
—such
and resounding judgments. Just
as fear of the
among
are easily interspersed
acute
as in the century before,
for that matter, no fixed distinction can be kept between intellectual authority
and intimate emotion
in
Donne's
ser-
mons. But such a distinction tury.
It
was
then,
endemic to the nineteenth cen-
is
when women
only as novelists but as (what
method
of
first
we
male utterance codified
began
call)
to publish not
intellectuals, that a
itself;
and, as a result, a
genuine difference seemed discernible between the ways in
which men think and think and write.
write,
They might
risk of being confused.
be dreaded living, as
is
and the ways
in
which women
publish simultaneously without
(Why,
in turn, this
confusion should
complex, though certainly connected with the
opposed to the
literary,
dread that each sex ex-
periences of being taken for the other.) So Dickens recorded his conviction that
George
Eliot's
Scenes from Clerical Life,
published anonymously, must be written by a woman.
The
dichotomy was established: the dominant and masculine
mode
possessing the properties of reason and knowledge, the
subsidiary and feminine tions. If this
on the
mode
possessing feelings and intui-
dichotomy was unreal,
part, particularly, of the
it
was not
less
dedicated
dominant mode. Until Oscar
Wilde, a direct and progressive control of circumstances,
however stubborn or ambiguous, seemed sirable to all writers.
possible
and de-
Wilde disrupted a voluntary assump158
:
DIFFERENCES tion of authority
IN
TONE
which had previously
an involuntary
fit
sense of cultural condition.
One
has the impression that the subsidiary
genuine, too
—
that, at
any
rate, as
women
time jobs more than men,
women
mode was
still
take part-
critics in the
nineteenth
century were gratified to discuss at least the feelings.
Anna Jameson's comparison
impossible to believe that Mrs. of Juliet
and Thekla
(''the
German
the heroine of
Juliet,''
was disingenuous
Schiller's Waltenstein)
The same
It is
confidence, innocence, and fervor of affection dis-
more vehement,
tinguish both heroines
:
the love of Thekla
more calm, and reposes more on
is
but the love of Juliet
is
itself;
the love of Juliet gives us the idea of infinitude, and that of
Thekla of eternity; the love of
Juliet flows
on with an increas-
ing tide, like the river pouring to the ocean, and the love of
Thekla stands unalterable, and enduring
as the rock. In the
heart of Thekla love shelters as in a home; but in the heart of Juliet
—"he
he reigns a crowned king
umphant!"
I
know,
I
rides
on
its
pants
know, both young women should be shut up
a year, with Mrs. Jameson, inside a computer. But
Jameson thought out that even though, exhausted by river/ rock distinction.t * Mrs.
Anna Jameson,
Burt, undated)
,
I
it,
am
is
still,
for
Mrs.
distinction,
infinitude/ eternity
she collapses at once into the rather fond of Mrs. Jameson:
Shakespeare's Tleroines, 1832
(New
York, A. L.
p. 77.
t Water, as Freud would observe,
"There
tri-
*
in the
is
often Mrs. Jameson's undoing:
beauty of Cordelia's character an
effect too sacred for
words, and almost too deep for tears, within her heart
159
is
a fathomless
— THINKING ABOUT WOMEN her bad
worse, but her worst
is
is
incomparable, as here in
her acrobatic pleasure in the notion of heartbeat-riding. Also,
son
it
would be dishonest not
is still alive.
To
to admit that
admit as well that
in
Mrs. Jame-
her present senility
she seems to have lost both her old occasional pertinence
and her constant
'Dolls,
Jbe Shadow
but more reputable observations of writers
IPife, etc.),
Nin
not only what are called
(7he Valley of the
'ladies^ novels"
Ana'is
Now
integrity.
or Rebecca
sibility, just as
West
like
repeat the ritual gestures of sen-
some men repeat those
of authority.
The one
seems essentially no more anachronistic than the other, but
women
these
strain
what was from the
start a subsidiary
mode, whereas these men merely prolong the dominant mode of a century.
Though
the one
as dubious as the other,
is
we
too continue involuntarily to anticipate cerebral benefits and
emotional
injuries.
This
perhaps
is
own time,
why we
since the authoritative
of original,
which
is
tion
interesting writing
have
I
mode
is
of sensibility
is
men
or the
women whom we
Extremes, of course, of anachronism are I
not marked in the
by women now. So
the very distinc-
tried to characterize will not apply consistently
to either the
ized.
no longer the mode
more than competent, expression. At the
same time, the exertion most
daily anticipate the worst of our
now^ admire most.
still
easily categor-
should guess that a particular aridity, what seems a
well of purest affection, but
its
waters sleep in silence and obscurity,
never failing in their depth and never overflowing in their fullness."
[My
italics.]
(Shakespeare's Jieroines,
p. 228.)
160
:
DIFFERENCES
TONE
IN
systematic dehydration of a subject,
for us not only
is still
obviously academic but obviously male
The
fourth set of images
is
provided through Dilscy's
re-
and symbolically there
an
flecting angle of vision. Implicitly
is
analogous relationship between Dilsey's emphasis on certain basic, primary, positive values throughout
and Ben's
intuitive
sense of values. Thus, the positive angles of vision, mirrored
by Ben and Dilsey most sharply tural parts of ally
7be Sound and
and symbolically
in the first
the yury,
as bracketing
and fourth
may be
struc-
considered
liter-
and containing the two
negative angles of vision mirrored
by Quentin and Jason
second and third parts. Taken in
this sense, the structural ar-
in the
rangement of these four hinged mirrors serves to heighten the reader's awareness of Faulkner's major thematic antithesis be-
tween the chaos-producing producing
human
effects of
effects of self-love
compassionate and
self-sacrificial love in
experience.*
This plane lands at Laputa protest that this
written
and the order-
is
in fifteen minutes.
One might
simply graduate-school prose, as
by both men and women
of nineteenth-century scholars
Germany, which has
students. But
it
emerge as such writers; but
is
(and men), particularly in
in the past
school model. In this way,
it is
it
the prose
been
is
this
set as the graduate-
true,
mode
some women may is
for
them even
* Lawrance Thompson, "Mirror Analogues in 7he Sound and the 7ury,"
Jbe Modern American T^ovel, dom House, 1966), p. 153.
ed.
Max
161
Westbrook (New York, Ran-
— H
T
more
.V
I
K
I
ABOUT
G
N-
men, an
imitative than for
XT
O
ME
N
intellectual transvestism as
well as a culturBl aitectation.
Again, one might say that the in
Norman The
fact c:
womar.
mate
r:
~?."er
::-.e
:??.'?.;.
if
zr.i
mode
of aiithorit\^ persists
immediately identifiable. a? male:
is
:h?.:
if
the prime responsibiiln' of a
on earth long enough
:o be
to find the best
and conceive children who
r:5f::ie ror herself,
prove
Jhe
Mailer and
.pecies.*
Ae
fact of the matter, the prime responsihtUty,
mode
phrasing of the
current of rir^dv. drivel,
I
I:
admire
authorin- \\ Allen
it is
joke.
"eternal
a hard lesson. There
is
an eternal object of which war
or inadequate idea.
worship of
sibylline
own
that
of re-
previous pub-
L. Kittredge.
Unexpectedly, as though one found that some frivolous expenditure was practical
women
writers
Norman
all,
move about with an
O. Brown, "A Reply
March 1%7,
after
to
in
this
new*
idiom
ease they could not feel
Herbert Marcxise," Commentary,
p. 83.
165
:
THINKING ABOUT before. Again,
am
I
X*:'OMEN
not speaking of those
who
relentlessly
prolong our evening with Elizabeth Barrett Browning (they
up and
will not get
Call it is
me a now
cab/')
say, ''Enough of this lucrative distress.
Instead,
.
possible for
I
hope
women
to define the
way
which
in
to WTite well. Quite simply,
having not had physical or intellectual authority before, they
have no reason to
There
me-downs, century. voir
resist a literature at
odds with authority.
who prefer instead to wear handborrow now the certitude of the nineteenth
are, of course, those
to
One might
say that the defect of Simone de Beau-
the authority of her prose
is
in hesitant times
:
the absence of hesitation
amounts to a presence, a tangible
defi-
ciency, a sense of obtuseness. In better
work by women now, while sentiment (as the inimical
as stigmatic
mark
—
avoided
is
of their sex in others'
again, as in Mailer
and
Svevo, by deliberate rashness or by ironic constraint.
The
minds), authority too
is
skirted
tenor of
Mary McCarthy's remarks on
different
from that of
He
is
a general
set.
seen.''
and has
On
just
won
a battle; he enters the scene
its
mind." "Is
commonplace man who
it
fair
and foul
murderous
who
day
I
is
seem
to
hot /cold /wet enough for you?"
A
talks in
"The sun
can't
commonplaces, a
might guess, on the Scottish fairways, Macbeth Shakespeare hero
a
note Macbeth's character tone
this flat
"Terrible weather we're having."
make up
rather
is
E. E. StolFs
making a remark about the weather. "So have not
2iacbeth
golfer, is
one
the only
corresponds to a bourgeois type: a
Babbitt, let us say.
166
DIFFERENCES
TONE
IN
Macbeth has absolutely no
feeling for others except envy, a
common
He
At once
middle-class
which
his rest,
is
trait.
a strange
a comical
and a
way
envies the murdered
suicidal wit: the intention of wit
What
exceeds that of justice or plausibility.
more
naturally
the opinion of
and more quickly than what
Macbeth
for a minute accept
And
Eisenhower.
hemline of the
is
Macbeth
late thirties.
to
determination to
its
criticism
middle-class
is
philistine
But
it is
it,
which
God knows had
deur.t
The
point of view
37.
t
is
It
daring,
feminine,
later preferred
is
in its social
narrow-
middle-class, the
hard to imagine a more
its
"common
middle-
mocking diminution of a subject taken on an institutionalized gran-
Mary McCarthy,
for
all
their
Harper's, June 1962, pp. 35
of
Mary McCarthy, which
ousts conventional attitudes,
"We
not the rashness, say, of Rebecca West: little
care of two or three nuns.
any part
girls'
is
wifely depreciation of
make Macbeth
itself. It is
rashness links
house was packed with
in
doesn't
perhaps necessary to distinguish between varieties of rashness.
The rashness is
its
''good sense"'
Mary McCarthy, "General Macbeth,"
and
One
and
the rashness of the judgment which re-
deems
its
Stoll says,
said
quite dead, like a
is
conception of envy than that
class trait.''
*
The
Macbeth's ''simple panic'O , but also
ness. In
is
as the general, the golfer, the
not only in
Macbeth (Lady Macbeth's
said
is
engaging. But wrong.
the Babbitt reference
in the pejorative sense,
Duncan
of looking at your victim.*
school.
of the world,
girls,
They
were not alone. The
aged from twelve
were, like
more comfortable
They were apparently waiting
167
to sixteen, in the
any gathering to look at
of their kind
than an English
quite calmly to
grow up.
:
.
THINKING ABOUT Norman
disagreements, with
>X^
O
MEN
Mailer; the diminution with
Svevo, and with now.
The
wit there
upon
Colette's
admire child gymnasts, but
I
To
writers.
in the
of
arrogant, as
is
not in this comment of
it is
literary prodigies
I
am
start with, there are too
world would not be afraid of a
movement through
a
little
many
afraid of child
of them.
Then who and ease
child's vigour
He
the impenetrable?
lacks only our
vocabulary to be our equal when the passion to write comes
upon him.
could give the name, at any rate the pseudonym
I
she has chosen to write under, of
whose
poems, two plays, three
There
is
same
the
more than one
if
not more novels, and ^Memoirs
facility
among
retain
my
me
Of
boys.
pressing hurry to form an opinion on so
confided to
as they are without
it,
and
my
part.
adults.
There were no
consent. But if it
to
make
all
no
feel
I
still
should only be
There was
There were none of the unhappy
which follow the English attempt
and show no
I
(sic)
youthful works,
so did the people looking after them.
no panic on anybody's
docile,
course
many
faculty for astonishment, even
They expected
girl of fifteen
baggage already comprises a slim volume of
literary
results
and
children look insipid
signs whatsoever that they will ever develop into little
with poked chins and straight hair,
girls
aggressively proud of being plain, nor were there pretty girls
making a
desperate precocious proclamation of their femininity. But, of course, in
a country where there
grow up
into
is
very
little
homosexuality,
it is
easy for
womanhood." (Black £amb and Qrey lakon,
girls to
Vol.
I,
p.
163.)
The
final generalization is the clue:
low herself
to
a person
is
obviously rash to
say anything so simple-silly. But the rashness
auntlike. In the end,
it
reiterates
is
placid
an old point of view rather than
a new one.
168
al-
and
risking^
:
DIFFERENCES
TONE
IN
for youthful writers' attempts to exploit their
Sometimes,
it is
own
novelty.
true, they conceal their identity, but they never
forget to state their age.*
A
muted,
and precious animosity,
light
McCarthy's. But the contradiction wit
the
is
means of relinquishing
Mary
in contrast to
superficial, in that all
is
authority, of deprecating
the importance not only of the subject but of the writer as well.
And
women
it
is
this predisposition
which moves men and
now. The same impulses
writers closer together
at
once to diminish and to amuse occur in Elizabeth Hardwick's description of Boston
Harvard (across the
Cambridge) and Boston are two
river in
ends of one moustache. Harvard tional
it
is
now
so large and interna-
has altogether avoided the whimsical stagnation of
Boston. But the two places need each other, as
say of a mismatched couple.
Behind such a passage
Auden argues
.
lies
the persuasion that prose, as
that poetry, can
public or loudspeaker voice.
we knowingly
.f
.
no longer be written
The
in the
persuasion too, that, within
judgment and so within some assumption of authority, there
must be
still
conscious reduction. Repeatedly, the large
and the unknown are compressed
into terms of the small
and known.
The
opposite tendency
is
to enlarge.
* Colette, 7f?e Blue Cantern, translated
Even the inhibited
by Roger Senhouse (New York,
Farrar, Straus, 1963), pp. 93-94.
t Elizabeth Hardwick, "Boston,"
in
A
Farrar, Straus, 1951), p. 154.
169
View
of
lAy
Own (New
York,
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN passage on Macbeth
Stoll
one must be so cautious large
in saying a thing, then
and important thing
be given a modern form.
end an enlargement:
in the
is
is
and
scrutinized again,
''echo of the soul.''
must be a
to say. But enlargement too can
What was
thought to be small and
known, and therefore not meaningful, such of milk,
it
if
as Mailer's glass
swells out into the bizarre
There are heroic confrontations but they
take place in the small intestine.
and
disquisition, carrots
And
even as such topics of
eggs, disturb our sense of proper
or authoritative enlargement, so the circumstances in which
they are discussed seem deliberately to deride their
official
or public significance. Like Sade's ''Philosophy in the Bed-
room," Mailer's "Metaphysics of the Belly" against formality I
like
by
Dickens
would be
I
who
shielded
disparateness.
have perhaps not helped
writers. But
is
are bent
at all those
upon
obsessed readers
identifying the sex of
could not promise that the second distinction
foolproof, and, except
on
its
lower
levels (those of
women and of reputable competence now less trustworthy than ever before.
popular sentiment for for
men)
,
it
seems
As both simple authority and simple
sensibility
have become
anachronistic, writers cohabit an area of prose in
sudden alternations of the reckless and the
sly,
which
the wildly
voluble and the laconic, define only a mutual and refreshing
disturbance of mind.
I
ing
have confined the point of authoritative tone, by thinkof
it
almost exclusively in terms of
170
critical
prose.
,
DIFFERENCES
IN
TONE
Meanwhile, the present approaches to poetry and to
which
are quite similar to those
Auden,
as
I
have
fiction
affect criticism as
well.
remarks on the impossibility of the
said,
public voice, and chooses for himself the private, personal
and
casual.
He
person can do, choice
is
will not i.e.,
seem to do more than the simplest
speak to one other person. But as
this
the poetic equivalent of critical modesty, so there
are poets, like prose writers,
who
choose
just as deliberately
be rash and immoderate. Allen Ginsberg and Andrei
to
Vozneshensky coincide
in the conviction that poetry
now be more
than public
phetic. Poets
may
priest,
—beyond
choose
now
must
secular authority, pro-
to play either penitent or
but no one wants to be prime minister.
Similarly in fiction, the often tedious discussion of ''point of view'"
probably
authority. This author.''
now
The
is
again, a backing
reflects,
expressed in a dismissal of the ''omniscient
preference has
equally commonplace)
sumably
away from
become popular for the narrator
(in fact,
who
is
by
pre-
like any reader: imperfectly informed, confused,
insecure in judgment
upon, the story.
—a part
And if this
than a commentator
of, rather
fallibility is
not
another withholding of authority occurs pretative faculty
is still
—
felt (or affected)
in
not directly exercised.
which an
The
total
inter-
com-
prehension, on the part of the writer, of his created situation is
merely implied by the factual terms in which he, seemingly
by
necessity
and with the utmost economy, puts the
situa-
tion forward.
Alternatively, these forms of reluctance to speak yield to
the relaxation of the sentence into
171
its
least strenuous, least
:
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN emphatic and
least periodic form.
denial of authority, but the
This relaxation
first qualities
is
an equal
put forward in
its
place are tentative: an acknowledgement of minute qualifications, a fidelity to this
and tremors
all flickers
of sensation. In
kind of sentence, especially, the sense of the manipula-
tion of experience yields entirely to the sense of reception. Virginia
Woolf was
its
sheer
new
inclined to consider the
sentence as sexually characteristic, as a ''woman's sentence''
She [Dorothy Richardson] has invented, vented, developed and applied to her
which we might gender.
It is
call the
of a
more
or, if she
own
has not in-
uses, a sentence
psychological sentence of the feminine elastic fibre
than the old, capable of
stretching to the extreme, of suspending the frailest particles,
of enveloping the vaguest shapes. Other writers of the opposite
sex have used sentences of this description and stretched them to the extreme. But there
is
a difference. Miss Richardson has
fashioned her sentence consciously, in order that
it
may
de-
scend to the depths and investigate the crannies of Miriam
Henderson's consciousness. in the sense that
writer
may
who
is
it is
It is
a
woman's
sentence, but only
used to describe a woman's mind by a
neither proud nor afraid of anything that she
discover in the psychology of her sex.*
But, in fact,
sentence.
it
seems impossible to determine a sexual
As Virginia Woolf
certain femininity
is
sentence has more in
in
herself
clear, the
Dorothy Richardson's
common
subject.
only
Her
with Henry James's or Joyce's
* Virginia Woolf, Contemporary Writers
& World,
makes
1966), pp. 124-25.
172
(New
York, Harcourt, Brace
DIFFERENCES than with, say, George
Eliot's.
TONE
IN
The
description of a sound
iromPilgrimage:
The sound
came from the den
of reading
word-slurring monotonous drawl
...
thurrah, thurrah
looped and forced into
—
—thurrah,
a
word-mouthing,
thurrah, thurrah;
a single beat, on and on, the words it
without any discrimination, the voice
dropping uniformly at the end of each sentence
... An
a child
to .
.
out.
...
a
class
.
.
emerge from
is
one from
to that of registration of
effect
upon
its
going
itself
femininity.
The
visible circumstances
unseen impressions. The implica-
again modest, in that judgment, or even comprehen-
sion, of the
whole scene
is
not pretended. Nothing
beyond the impression of the whole upon a (however
sensitive)
arrogance, though is
reciting.
about
a consciousness expresses
inwardness rather than
its
rhetorical shift
is
thrah.
.*
The means by which such
tion
.
.
board-school children
of
Perhaps they had changed their minds
.
.
Early Victorian voice, giving reproachful instruction
it
limited witness.
is
asserted
single, living
and
The only remaining
alone can sometimes
become
palpable,
the conviction that the witness's impressions have signifi-
cance.
At the same time, extravagance
American
is
as in poetry, a contrary allegiance to
apparent in
fiction
—a
fiction,
deliberate rhetorical swinging-out be-
yond previous bounds. This *
perhaps particularly in
is
the
first
and most
striking
Dorothy Richardson, "The Tunnel," Pilgrimage (New York, Alfred A.
Knopf, 1967), Vol.
II,
p. 61.
173
H
T
I
N:
K
I
-V
ABOUT
G
\r
O
ME
N'
aspect of William Gass's Omettsetter's Luck, of Mailer's li'hy
We in Vietnam
Are
?,
IVeed Jactor and Qiles Qoat-Boy
John Earth's Jbe Sot-
of
—where pleasure
in reproduction, in the mock-re\ival
fundamental ity. It is
shift
from
clear in such
niscience
is
work
that the conventional
a critical half-truth.
the unqualified assumption
which
will
is
taken
(appropriate to the
sobriet}') of extinct tones of author-
Only
the stolid
and
of understanding.
no longer do
ban on omstraight-
now seems insupportable,
forward assumption of omniscience
qualit}'
Norman
in the
The same
game warden
is
in-
stead sought out in the goat or the rhinoceros. It
must be
an appetite
said for the authoritative
for
strong. This
mode,
as
is
it is
it,
as for
met by
illusion of certitude,
—
in
pronouncement,
(the freshman theme:
It is
perhaps for
this
and more read conventional
They
can't be
assumed
still
common
past
in definition, in
Describe a mechanical
process. Analyze the charaaer of a person welT),
is
a general capacity- to write in the
least difficult to write out of a
and common training exposition
any
mode, however, that
whom you know
reason that more people write writing
critical
to care
more
now than
for fact
theor>^ than others have. N'onficrion,
before.
and opinion and
on the whole,
is
now
simply the easiest and most familiar (and, at the same time, useful)
ambiance of words which
thorit}^ in the
gence, been exiled garit\^ It
lags
clings
now
But intelligence
behind the
now
is left.
An
equivalent au-
conventional novel has slipped beneath to
intelli-
our vast Siberian reaches of
in turn
difficulties
is
a limited reading qualit\'.
of innovation
and therefore
to the last reputable area of convention.
174
\'ul-
^v
e-^
RESPONSES
there
must have been a time
when
things were looser
a time between gas and sohd
when
things could shift about
imagine seeing through people or whatever
we were
then
and hugging vapor to vapor or jelly to jelly that
was an
—Edward
inventive time
Field, ''Jellyfish Invasion"
from Stand Vp, Jriend, With 7de.
«^ am I
of
eager to describe the small capacity or inclination
many women
thinking which
and
for executive sexuality, that
of sexual
primarily forceful, economical, forthright
is
decisive.
While they provide of feelings,
losing
if
women
by
achieved
evidence of a superior delicacy
little
tend to be skeptical of what can be
physical force. After
all,
they involve themselves. Their
game
football ''It
mode
would be
or the prize fight, pointless for
me
''It's
they are certain of first
comment on
the
so pointless,'' means,
to take part."
With modern
weapons, of course, and with the modern integration of combatants and noncombatants (children too are committed to
war now
wounded and diminish.
sense that, like their parents, they are
in the
killed), this
Women
distinction of feebleness
are already soldiers in the
namese army and, behind the in
our minds the distinction
to
which
women United
all
the
weak
are
more
Out
is
Still,
subject than the strong,
And
in the
withdrawal holds them apart from a ma-
jor preoccupation of the society. ciliation
army.
of that cowardice
continue to withdraw from violence. States, this
North Viet-
lines, in the Israeli
persists.
may
an emphasis,
like
The only
available recon-
Norman Mailer's, upon women's 176
RESPONSES pleasure in seeing violence done.* But this suggests again the
and compensation: men do, women watch;
fallacy of balance
the cast has an audience, the Scotch takes soda. In fact,
watch
Everyone
too.
vicarious,
it still
available to that taste;
is
does not constitute
full
men
and since
it is
participation in the
predominant mode.
Moreover, watchers vary
They may
Women
as easily
must be
in their reactions to spectacle.
grow confused or
tired as dedicated.
any
partially conscious, in witnessing
dis-
(however apparently purposeful or deliberate), of
order
emerging from disorder as well. Their physiology
from which confidence tracted.
in executive procedure
not one
is
can be ex-
Menstruation proves that the body carries out ex-
pensive, time-consuming
and
tion of the uterine wall,
which leaves the
futile operations.
The
retrac-
inflated veins to
atrophy, break open and lose their absurd provisions for a
non-event, constitutes an image of repeated bankruptcy.
monthly reminder that failure
may
failure
as likely as success,
is
sometimes be as welcome as success
A
and that
—
principles
which, obviously, do not govern our society.
Nothing is
else in
human
physiology, except perhaps aging,
comparable to the eerie abstraction of
resolute private timing seems *
The opinion
quis de Sade: tacle,
is
mad. The
revived, rather than conceived,
this process.
by Mailer. The Mar-
"Would you meet them [women]? Announce a
cruel spec-
a burning, a battle, a combat of gladiators, you will see droves of
them come running; but these occasions are not numerous enough feed their fury in the
Its
sane purpose of
:
to
they contain themselves, and they suffer." ("Philosophy
Bedroom," 7he ^Marcjuis de Sade,
177
p. 255.)
— THINKING ABOUT WOMEN punctuality
is
an encounter between one thing and another
an editor and meets
his desk, a
at least death.
But the menstrual schedule
while the conception is
like
farmer and his cow. Even aging
it
an alarm clock going
schedule, an unnerving suggestion of
even,
is
its
being
compulsively, for being pointlessly, timed.
forces
mounts
rain falls
by which
It
most heavily on
moral decision.
about the
all
more
the
the intensity of physical
purpose
It is
—
as
picnics.
in the vociferous opinions of others
cerning the functions of
It
observes only
in inverse ratio to their rational
Nothing much
precise,
an empty bedroom, or a
off in
mentally disturbed computer. There
the Archimedean rule
is
anticipates occurs capriciously.
women
con-
encourages them, either, in
impossible for
women
to consider
them-
selves with the unqualified rapture or the unqualified horror
through which they move. Inhabiting the only form there is
for
them
to inhabit, they cannot find
asylums, in that case, would
complex.
Nor is
judgment of
So they
find
it
their it
swarm with
possible for
own
it
women
simply heroic
—the
victims of a Ceres
to accept the opposite
loathsomeness, and continue to
live.
hard to honor the wife and dishonor the pros-
titute, to
dispense these moral merits and demerits with the
standard
celerity.
called
The
prostitute in
Women's Court:
what was,
until recently,
a Daumier sketch, female in center
of males, a creature not calculated to enhance, for other creatures like her, the effect of consistency in our sexual ethic.
On the contrary, not taking part in the prostitute's
ployment or her punishment, other to confuse the
two
women
em-
tend (obtusely)
as superficial, night-and-day variations
178
RESPONSES Next
of use.
to the pleasure of reading
pornography
that
is
of deciding whether or not such reading should be forbid-
den. So
we inexorably
Steiner's ''Night
vacy.
To become
George
arrive at public essays, such as
Words/' on the importance
of erotic pri-
so doubly engaged, one must have not only
appetite, but the illusion of one's authority to direct the
appetite of others. But
women,
like
many Negroes, may
cease
to endorse either the elevation or denigration of themselves,
and so
reject the prevailing habit of
who
Christ honored only the mother
who
tercourse and the prostitute
were
and both
alike, after all,
extreme differentiation. conceived without in-
resigned from
to endorse such absolute
sense of sexual experience
form upon contrasting there
may be
itself
only contrast.*
One
evident compulsion. contrast as the only
men. Essential nature
The
insistence of
Its
with an odd impression of
of continuance, as though
not
fectly
girl in
women: "They had
the picture;
persuaded themselves that she must be
mean
that
man
life
comparative than that
in the light of other
and glamorous than they were. called into question. If a
its
fixed for them: they hold themselves con-
phone operator that there was a all,
one
validity fades before
not permitted themselves to feel resentment because they
and
for them.
judgments when the
women seems more
is less
under reconsideration
stantly
form
with the other suggests that
is left
means
* Even the physical vanity of of
relative.
is
So they
at fault in the sexual
which God the Father had presumably designed It is difficult
it.
infinitely
In this way, their
prefers, say,
you are not perfectly
all
the
more beautiful
own charms were not
Greta Garbo
right in
knew from
and they had, one
your own
to you, style,
it
does
not per-
adequate to any of the usual requirements." (Mary McCarthy,
"Portrait of the Intellectual as a Yale
Keeps.)
179
Man," from
J/^e
Company She
H \K
T
were denned erties of
N'
I
I
ABOUT WO M E
G
a? the lungs'
>J
compulsion to contrast the prop-
oxygen and carbon dioxide. Or
as
Genet describes
the imposed monosexuality of the men's prison, in which
some men must become pseudowomen
in order that all the
customar>' sexual, psychological and social distinctions persist, artificially.
The
habit of each sex
is
may
to define the
inadequacies of the other, and then to love or hate them.
Whichever has
the larger opportunity to speak defines the
more
all
loudly.
At
intellectual levels. In a single issue of Life
Magazine, there have been ing that no
and
woman
(1) the
White House chef
claim-
can make grasshopper pie as good as
(2) the poet John Berr\'man shouting, All
are spinsters or Lesbians! But
why
women
his,
poets
does he care? WTiat
is
the implied interdependence of good poetr\' and hetero-
sexual experience?
own work
primatur of his
But, of course, the
whatever one does could do is
it.
Each
this cry, that
more
the
commitment
It is
equally
is
his
own
is
to say that
cries
out for
its o\s'n
matchlessness. as
And
it
He, which batters
therefore, inevitably, discourages
women
difficult,
of aggrandizing
no one of the opposite sex
She cannot do as well
of
copulative histor\'?
most immediate means
— and which
the
ears
Does Mr. Beriyman suppose the im-
to our social professions.
physiologically, for
to the sexual virtues of purpose, foresight
women
to aspire
and economy. The
pre-eminent shrewdness, for example, with which Henry Miller's protagonist, in
Jbe Jropic
grante), steals his bus fare
doned
purse.
less sense of
A woman
of Cancer (and in fla-
home from
his partner's
might do the same, but
I
aban-
think with
her election thereby to Everx^woman. Pleasure
ISO
— RESPONSES or profit seems
more
by men. Keeping
easily interpreted as
commandment
the
Duty
or Destiny
and multi-
to ''increase
ply" coincides more neatly for them with natural inclination.
At the same
time,
women
cannot help observing that con-
ception (their highest virtue,
or doesn't.
by
show,
reports) simply happens
all
lacks the style of enterprise.
It
exaggerated), but
is
if
.
devious business benefiting
not to care, as though the
as
it
quence of
do not
—
does in
illness
body
here, as abortion
anything, a deterrent.
indirection,
must
self
regrettable conception, the
much
by
can be prevented
accomplished by luck
it is
(good or bad) Purpose often seems,
A
It
and device (though success
foresight
rates
by
by pretending
trick the
body. In the
instead tricks the self
or death.
It is
probably in conse-
this physical sense of double-dealing that
any
at
rate,
convincingly
—endorse
women
evangelical
views of sexual intercourse. Sober self-congratulation
peded for them by the ever-present
possibility of
is
im-
becoming
the butt of a joke.
Nor can women
think properly in terms of the conser\'a-
tion or frugal distribution of sexual materials.* fusion, for
men, of a
capitalistic
muse women, whose *
At
chief sexual
the present time, thrift
bet%veen the self
and what
and physical
is
is
(if
The easy
ethic
must be-
not spiritual) charac-
repeatedly urged in every interchange
not the
self. If
materials must be lost to the
outer world, the loss must be regretted, or at least studied. In About the J^ouse,
Auden
expresses gratification in the achievement of normal
regular bowel movements, leaves
—modem "sermons
esting that
Malamud
and Norman Mailer "reads" in stones."
From
and
feces like tea
this point of view,
it is
inter-
should assign Jakov Bok (in 7be Jixer) the job
of supervising truckloads of bricks.
181
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN teristic
is
an ungovernable extravagance. In
human
entrepreneur except nature, the
fact,
to
any
female would seem
too wasteful an item to be kept in stock.
This extravagance
like
when Western
two empty
available
when
(i.e.,
are largely
their adult lives,
—and almost
picnic hampers. Yet in the
pregnancies were more
upper-class
numerous and when no convenient
was
During
of sex.
carry this excess baggage everywhere
always aimlessly, past,
The breasts
even external.
any economy
gratuitous to
women
is
substitute for breast milk
breasts were
most economical),
nursing was instead considered socially degrading. According to their caste, as
women
cows do now, or
child of the
while rive. first,
its
for
provided milk for
none
at
all.
An
all
infants,
much
infant, like the first
Sigmund Freuds, might scream with hunger
mother and father waited for the wet nurse to
according to Freud, did nothing but eat
now, when nursing has become
ar-
in turn.
The
his food.)
And
(The Freuds waited for two wet nurses
optional, a practice one
chooses or declines according to temperament, the breasts take on a macabre physiological
How they engorge themselves, bing tumors of pain,
when
plasticine (in his play 2iotel)
At the same
not erotic) character.
swelling into great red throb-
the
nurse the child. In comparison.
(if
woman
Van is
"decides"' not to
Itallie's
making them of
an innocuous grotesquerie.
time, the use of the breasts having declined as
their susceptibility to cancer remains stable
creases, as a correlation
tance to cancer
is
(or rather in-
between breast-feeding and
resis-
generally assumed), they indicate death
182
RESPONSES more than
Like out-of-season
life.
two forms of marketing waste But then,
all
fruits,
they exemplify
—display and decay.
productions of the female body are slow and
burdensome: the dropsical heaviness which can precede menstruation, the monstrous weight of pregnancy. pausal disturbances are relieved tranquillizers
—
to drain off excesses of
So much for the
tion.
by combined
Meno-
diuretics
and
both water and emo-
spiritual significance of either.
(Or
does the body, in this way, offer intimations of some im-
And
mortal dismay?)
Tolstoyan, reckless of
its
property.
:
the release of
body
the
One might
ference of
women,
placentae.
An
is
all
these materials
is
freed rather than deprived
take as characteristic the indif-
after childbirth, to the disposition of their
indifference corrected
by those models
of our
economy, the drug manufacturers, who put the placentae to (their
second) profitable use by extracting hormones from
them.
The
Victorian correlation between sexual discharges
and money,* and the consequent recommendations of sexual budgeting, persist in masculine and provident, rather than in
feminine and improvident, contexts.
This variation in attitude attaches particularly to pregnancy.
To
speak of
ment (something to the observer
and impossible tional
is
one of gain or incre-
a simplification natural
(axiom what grows larger must be richer) :
for the participant.
commitment
* This correlation
this condition as
in the oven, etc.)
is
to
No
intellectual or
emo-
pregnancy can erase the physical
discussed
by Steven Marcus
torians.
183
in his
^he Other Vic-
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN sense,
if
not of invasion, at least of inconvenience. Colette
having looked
recalls
acquisition
may be
a rat with a stolen egg'': the
''like
precious but
ward.
It
down
someplace. Delivery
it
is
as
much
Secret Life, a pregnant country
cates
girl is
"My
(In
called ''poisoned.'')
seems to have no moral relevance,
this relief
it
a relief as an achieve-
ment. Literally, one gets rid of a foreign body.
And
awk-
also extremely
is
always seems desirable, at the proper time, to put
no connubial or maternal vice or
virtue.
It
it
indi-
is
only
an intense variety of the individual and amoral pleasure of
any convalescence, mere
existence.
in
which the person newly appreciates
Conventional sexual economics are too
simple, since the pleasure in the child
both profit and
So
riage,
fall
to
seem deciduous, men evergreen.
from women, repeatedly,
they drop even their
girls, in
complexly one of
loss.
women come
Things
is
last
names
cyclically.
which case they sometimes hyphenate
with their husbands'.
The
With mar-
(unless they're English
eclat of this
their
punctuation
the hint of sexual parity). Ordinarily, even couples
names
justifies
named
Beasley want boys, else the-name-will-die-out. Girls lose their virginity too,
bloodied sheet
more markedly than boys
is still
(in Algeria, the
exhibited to the wedding guests)
their reputation, or both.
Next they
—
or
lose babies in miscar-
riage; or, allowed the natural posture of childbirth, they drop
them
at full term. Eventually they lose the capacity itself for
experiencing these former losses. Even the uterus, the pear
standing on of
its
its
stem, tends to
fall
over, as though wearying
inane poise. At the same time, the chins, the breasts
184
RESPONSES and the
The
belly sag.
flesh of the
bones, like a wet wash on the
Of
course,
women
the end of Jinnegans of
humanity
(or
all
line.
are not quite alone in this losing. At
Wake, Anna
men) and
their brash bodies.'' But
plumped
arms hangs from the
''all
more
Livia Plurabelle
for gaining only, even
down
the lazy leaks
often, in societies
tired
is
over
which have
young women suggest
its
twin losing too keenly. Though the young of both sexes feed
upon
fantasies of the
power
these fantasies are diluted for
the effect of their bodies of pregnancy
still
tyrannical caprices,
upon
is
possibility
the chance of being so
girls' irresponsibility,
that everyone
—bound
to
knows,
in fact,
dom-
of their
they are
be caught, and soon,
(Donne: 'Tor thou thyself
their giving birth,
new
may
voiding
a concomitant fear of
art
thine
in
own
perhaps in stubborn reaction that the emphasis
It is
introduce
by
young
with the net
consequence. bait.")
of
by
an innate insecurity. Dreams
constitutes
The charm
fish flirting
girls
upon themselves. The
of domination are disturbed inated.
of their bodies over others,
upon
lives, is blatant.
their ability
and readiness
to
The most remarkable human
then, in turn, be thought of as fulfillment,
the implication of the parents' end be obscured
beginning. Their joy, too, modifies this implication. clearer in that mixture of pleasure
and comic
and
in the child's
distress
It
is
with
which people become grandparents.
The
sexual responsibility of
But nature, society.
in this matter,
It is
as
women
is
inevitable, proper.
seems excessively subsidized by
though the female body, more subdy
cistic in its intents
than the male, was nonetheless
185
fas-
felt to
be
THINKING ABOUT WOMEN an
insufficient obstacle to license or insouciance.
must lend
its
about them.
The
society
help, to island the bodies in vast seas of
An inescapable
against inattention
attention
—nothing
is
is
more
words
repeatedly cautioned lucrative,
I
suppose,
than manuals of popular gynecology. The advertisements,
7emina sang the
for example, of Dr. Eric Trimmer's
invari-
able duet of purposes: (1) the renovation of the libido and (7)
the detection of disease. These are only superficially
incompatible
—
like
frequenting and sentencing prostitutes,
sweating and freezing, part of the diurnal advance and retreat.
One
Can
is
to
be enticed by sample revelations of Jemina-.
a missed period be a
symptom
of a disease completely
unrelated to the reproductive tract?
What symptom may
suggest the need for increasing the fre-
quency of intercourse?*
A blind passion
for the gas-meter
the dog's ear. Underlying ever, the play
is
all
man, no doubt, or
these joys of speculation,
upon two sources
biting
how-
of anxiety: (1) the uni-
form suspicion that some female bodies
are doing tricks
that other female bodies haven't learned, and (2) the uni-
form suspicion that
all
female bodies take nasty advantage
of the least diversion of interest from themselves. ing prospect for
one of
men
is
one of morbid
relentless self-scrutiny.
The
The
titillation, for
read-
women
society's twin deities of
sensation and hygiene exact the tribute of feminine narcissism.
* 7