Gynocriticism
Gynocriticism
Gynocriticism
XU Yue
(School of International Studies, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, 310058, China)
Abstract: In the history of feminist criticism, especially the Anglo-American feminist criticism,
gynocriticism is in the transitional period. Gynocriticism is a criticism which concerns itself with developing a
specifically female framework for dealing with works written by women, in all aspects of their production,
motivation, analysis, and interpretation, and in all literary forms, including journals and letters. The main concerns
of gynocriticism are to identify what are taken to be the distinctively feminine subject matters in literature written
by women; to uncover in literary history a female tradition, incorporated in sub-communities of women writers;
and to show that there is a distinctive feminine mode of experience, or “subjectivity,”in thinking, valuing, and
perceiving oneself and the outer world. Though gynocriticism got a mixed reputation, it has a great contribution to
feminist criticism. In this thesis, the writer will discuss the contribution from three aspects: the object, theoretical
achievement, and quality of its study.
Key words: Anglo-American feminist criticism; gynocriticism; contribution; study object; theoretical
achievement; study quality
1. Introduction
Compared with the long tradition of the feminist practice or women’ s liberation, feminist literary criticism is
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a modern criticism approach that just started in 20 century. The chief pioneers of this approach are English writer
Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) and French writer Simone de Beauvior (1908-1986). They firstly had an insight into
the twist of the female image and sexism in the male writers’works. This initiated the pursuing of the female
reading and writing in the feminist criticism. Since 1960s, Kate Millet with her Sexual Politics made the feminist
literary criticism become a theoretical branch. American poet and writer Adrienne Rich, Mary Ellmann; professors
Sandra Gilbert, Susan Gubar and Elaine Showalter; French writer Helene Cixous and English psychoanalyst Juliet
Mitchell also contributed a lot. In this period, feminist criticism transformed from the “Female Aesthetic” to
“Gynocritics.”After 1980s, feminist literary criticism got to the way of finding the self of female and affirming
the self. The theorists in this period, for example, Julia Kristeva and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak implied post
structuralism, psychoanalysis to explore the gender theory. Till now, after a series of ideological trend, feminist
criticism was to find a kind of “discourse,”which is neither masculine nor feminine, but exists in a “third”form.
From the history of theoretical feminism, we usually divided it into two parts, the Anglo-American and the French.
These two parts have different theoretical backgrounds, study objects and research methods: American and
English critics have for the most part engaged in empirical and thematic studies of writings by and about women;
on the other hand, the most prominent feminist critics in France, have been occupied with the theory of the role of
gender in writing, conceptualized within various post-structural frames of, and above all Jacques Lacan’s
XU Yue (1982- ), female, graduate student of institute of English literature, School of International Studies, Zhejiang University;
research field: British and American literature.
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Contribution of gynocriticism to feminist criticism
The concept of gynocriticism is introduced in Showalter ’s Towards a feminist poetics (1979) for an
appropriate form of feminist criticism, namely, the type which is concerned with woman as writer— with woman
as the producer of textual meaning, with the history, themes, genres, and structures of literature by women. There
is no term existing in English for such a specialized discourse, so Showalter adapted the French term la
gynocritique (gynocritics).
Gynocriticism is a criticism which concerns itself with developing a specifically female framework for
dealing with works written by women, in all aspects of their production, motivation, analysis, and interpretation,
and in all literary forms, including journals and letters. To be more specific, according to Elaine Showalter, it is a
program which “to construct a female framework for the analysis of women’s literature, to develop new models
based on the study of female experience, rather than to adapt male models and theories”(Showalter, Towards a
feminist poetics, 1979). Notable books in this mode include Patricia Meyer Spacks ’The female imagination
(1975), on English and American novels of the past three hundred years; Ellen Moers’Literary women (1976), on
major women novelists and poets in England, America, and France; Elaine Showalter ’s A literature of their own:
British women novelists from Bronte to Lessing (1977); and Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar’The madwoman in
the attic (1979). Moers’Literary women (1976) was “a preliminary sketching in or ‘mapping’of this kind”
(Selden 1997, p. 135). In Showalter ’s A literature of their own (1977), she “outlines a literary history of women
writers (many of whom had, indeed, been ‘hidden from history’); produces a history which shows the
configuration of their material, psychological and ideological determinant; and promotes both a feminist critique
(concerned with women readers) and a ‘gynocritics’(concerned with women writers)” (Selden, 1997, p. 135).
Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar ’s The madwoman in the attic (1979) stresses especially the psychodynamics of
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Contribution of gynocriticism to feminist criticism
women writers in the nineteenth century. Its authors propose that the “anxiety of authorship,”resulting from the
stereotype that literary creativity is an exclusively male prerogative, effected in women writers a psychological
duplicity that projected a monstrous counter figure to the idealized heroine, typified by Bertha Rochester, the
madwoman in Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre; such a figure is “usually in some sense the author ’s double, an image
of her own anxiety and rage”(Gilbert & Gubar, 1979).
There are three main concerns of gynocriticism. One concern is to identify what are taken to be the
distinctively feminine subject matters in literature written by women — the world of domesticity, for example, or
the special experiences of gestation, giving birth, and nurturing, or mother-daughter and woman-woman
relations— in which personal and affectional issues, and not external activism, are the primary interests. Another
concern is to uncover in literary history a female tradition, incorporated in sub-communities of women writers
who were aware of, emulated, and found support in earlier women writers who in turn provide models and
emotional support to their own readers and successors. A third undertaking is to show that there is a distinctive
feminine mode of experience, or “subjectivity,”in thinking, feeling, valuing, and perceiving oneself and the outer
world. Related to this is the attempt to specify the traits of a “woman’ s language,”or distinctively feminine style
of speech and writing, in sentence structure, types of relations between the elements of a discourse, and
characteristic figures and imagery. Some feminists have turned their critical attention to the great number of
women’s domestic and “sentimental”novels, which are noted in derogatory fashion in standard literary histories,
yet which dominated the market for fiction in the nineteenth century and produced most of the best-sellers of the
time; instances of this last critical enterprise are Elaine Showalter ’s A literature of their own: British women
novelists from Bronte to Lessing (1977) on British writers, and Nina Baym’s Woman’ s fiction: A guide to novels by
and about women in America, 1820-1870 (1978). Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar have described the later history
of women’s writings in No man’ s land: The place of the woman writer in the twentieth century.
Just as Showalter said, “gynocritics is related to feminist research in history, anthropology, psychology, and
sociology, all of which have developed hypotheses of a female subculture including not only the ascribed status,
and the internalized constructs of feminity, but also the occupations, interactions, and consciousness of women”
(Showalter, 1979).
The main tasks of gynocritics are to reorder the list of literary canon and uncover some “silent”female
writers; to analyze “female creativity” and the specificity of female literary tradition. Based on these tasks, the
contribution of gynocriticism can be found in many areas in feminist criticism. We will discuss its contribution
from three aspects: the object, theoretical achievement, and quality of its study.
3.1 The object of gynocriticism: reordering of the literary canon
The goal of gynocriticism is to enlarge and reorder the literary canon— that is, the set of works which by a
cumulative consensus, have come to be considered major and to serve as the chief subjects of literary history,
criticism, scholarship, and teaching. In A literature of their own, Showalter uncovered a group of female writers.
However, she neglected the black and lesbian female writers. But soon, the feminist critic discovered their
careless omission, and they began to “excavate”the black and lesbian female writers and their works.
All in all, in gynocriticism, feminist studies have served to raise the status of many female authors who are
more or less scanted by scholars and critics and to bring into purview other authors who have been largely or
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Contribution of gynocriticism to feminist criticism
entirely overlooked as subjects for serious consideration. Some feminists even have devoted their critical attention
especially to the literature written by lesbian writers, or that deals with lesbian relationships in a heterosexual
culture. The discovery of the general female writers and their literary works makes the feminist criticism even the
whole literary criticism more comprehensive.
3.2 The theoretical achievement of gynocriticism
3.2.1 Idea about “female subculture”
Showalter finds that because of the phallic prejudice, the female writers are easily to be submerged in the
river of literary history. Then she raised the assumption of “female subculture”which has its own subjects and
images. Showalter emphasized, “Gynocritics is related to feminist research in history, anthropology, psychology,
and sociology, all of which have developed hypotheses of a female subculture including not only the ascribed
status, and the internalized consciousness of women” (Showalter, 1979). Based on the development of female
consciousness, Showalter “identified three historical phases of women’s literary development: the ‘feminine’
phase (1840-1880), during which women writers imitated the dominant tradition; the ‘feminist’phase (1880-1920),
during whic h women advocated minority rights and protested; and the ‘female’phase (1920- ), during which
dependency on opposition— that is, on uncovering misogyny in male texts— is being replaced by a rediscovery of
women’s texts and women”(Guerin, 2004, p. 198). This is also the track of the growth of female subculture. In the
first phase, female writers imitated the traditional mode of mainstream culture; in the second phase, female writers
began to oppugn these traditional value rules; the third phase is the self-discovering period, female writers began
to search their own identity without relying on the opposition with male.
The idea about “female subculture” apposes the long time oppression of the female consciousness in the
phallic society. This idea also enlightens the later feminist critics to probe into the female aesthetic more
comprehensively.
3.2.2 The theory on “female creativity”
In The madwoman in the attic (1979), Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar rebuilt the visage of female literary in
the 19th century, and also tried to find out the essence of female creativity— whether it is the female nature or the
femininity which is constructed by the social culture.
Though the comprehensive study of the brief female writers in the 19th century, Gilbert and Gubar found that
the creativity was defined as masculine. Their concept “anxiety of authorship,” used to describe
nineteenth-century women writers— like Harold Bloom’s male-applied term “anxiety of influence” — derives
from Freud’ s psychosexual paradigm of the Oedipus complex. If women follow a normative female resolution of
the Oedipus complex, the father (the male literary tradition) becomes the object of female desire, and the
pre-Oedipal desire for the mother (or her literature) is renounced. Twentieth-century women writers have the
option of the “affiliation complex,” which allows them to “adopt” literary mothers and to escape the male
“belatedness,”or the “anxiety of influence” theorized by Bloom, which is in effect a biological imperative for
literary descent from an originatory father. Normative resolution of the Oedipus complex may leave women
anxious about the fragility of paternal power, worried about usurping paternal primacy, and fearful of male
vengeance. The resulting “masculinist complex”grants autonomy, a new maternal relation, and the creative option
of male mimicry— a departure from Freud’ s negative judgment.
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However, in 19 century, because of the patriarchal literary creativity, the right of creating female image of
female writers’own has been deprived. Then, the female writers must create some “immutable” female images
according with the patriarchal standard to meet the masculine yearning. On the contrary, the ideal women quality
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Contribution of gynocriticism to feminist criticism
is hidden in the monstrous figures such as Bertha Rochester, the madwoman in Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre. This
figure is a counter-figure to the idealized heroine, but it is usually in some sense the author’ s double, an image of
her own anxiety and rage. Based on this, Gibert and Gubar answered the question about female creativity. They
deepen the significance of these “madwomen,”and treat them as the creative impetus of female writers in the 19th
even 20th century. These madwoman or monster repeatedly created by women writers is the author’ s double,
expressing her anxiety, rage, and “schizophrenia of authorship” (Gilbert & Guber, 1979, p. 78). They detect
asymmetrical male and female responses to the rise of female literary power. Women have emerged from their
liminal position in the attic to wage the battle between the two genders.
The contribution of Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar is mainly on theoretical level. Their novel way of
theoretical research enlightens a lot of feminist critics. Their work stands on the first stage of the change of
feminist criticism. At this time, feminist criticism began their real literary and textual analysis.
3.3 The quality of gynocriticism
Compared with French feminist criticism, the gynocriticism was not so thoughtful. However, the quality of
gynocritical study is also very significant. That is, their great attention to the real world. They always bear the
intention of considering the historical and social elements in their study of literary works in mind. Though we
emphasize that feminist criticism should raise their theoretical level, the feminist critics should still carry on this
study quality. Only in this way, can feminist criticism develop in the right direction.
4. Conclusion
Gynocriticism is the transitional period of feminist criticism, especially the Anglo-American feminist
critic ism. This special status entrusts gynocriticism complex study method, object, and quality; also leads
abundant theoretical achievement. The feminist critics of gynocriticism form their own peculiar study style, and a
connecting link between the first phase led by Virginia Woolf and the third phase mixing with psychoanalysis and
post-structuralism. It has great contribution to the developing of feminist criticism in many aspects. That is what
we try to find out in this paper.
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(Edited by Wendy, Jessica and Hanna)
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