Towards Feministic Poetics Elaine Showal
Towards Feministic Poetics Elaine Showal
Towards Feministic Poetics Elaine Showal
Elaine Showalter
Introduction
Elaine Showalter is one of America’s literary scholars and a pioneer in the feminist
feminism that see feminist critics as being ‘obsessed with phallus’ and ‘obsessed with
destroying male critics’. Showalter wonders if such stereotypes emerge from the fact that
feminism lacks a fully articulated theory. According to Showalter the academic demand for
theory can only be heard as a threat to the feminist need for authenticity and the visitor
looking for a formula that he or she take away without personal encounter is not welcome.
Feminist Critique
literature. It is a way of criticizing in which a female reader changes the apprehension of the
given text, awakening it to the significance of sexual codes. The historically grounded inquiry
of the critique probes the ideological assumptions of literary phenomena. They are concerned
about the images and stereotypes of women in literature, the omission of and misconceptions
about women in criticism and the exploitation and manipulation of the female audience.
Feminist critiques are essentially political and polemical. It is metaphorically similar to Old
Testament seeking ‘the grace of imagination’ and looking for the errors of the past.
Gynocritic
Casterbridge to demonstrate that one of the problems of feminist critique is that it is ‘male-
oriented’ which means even when criticizing patriarchy, the focus is towards male. As an
alternative Showalter presents gynocritics as a way 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 to adapt male models and theories. Gynocritic is concerned
with woman as writer, the producer of textual meaning, with the history, themes, genres, and
structures of women. They eschew the inevitability of the male models and theories and seeks
a purely female model. She claims that women writers have their own tradition.
Three Phases
Showalter says that women’s writing in the past was overlooked and undervalued by
the male critics. She has reconstructed the past of literary history of women and classifies
women’s writing into three phases that establishes the continuity of the female tradition from
decade to decade.
Feminine Phase
Showalter sees the first phase taking place from 1840 to 1880. She declares that this
phase is characterized by women in an effort to equal the intellectual of the male culture. It
exerted an irregular pressure on the narrative, affecting tone, diction, structure and
characterization. The women writers internalized the dominant male aesthetic standards. The
distinguishing sign of this period is the male pseudonym as women were not allowed to write.
Bronte Sisters, George Eliot and Elizabeth Gaskell are some of the women writers who
Feminist Phase
The Feminist Phase follows from 1880 to 1920in which women are historically
Elizabeth Robins, Francis Trallope and others protested against the male canons and values.
It is a period of separatist utopia. They developed a sense of personal injustice and wrote
biased of male. This phase is characterized by the visions of perfect, female-led societies of
the future.
Female Phase
Showalter posits the third phase, the Female phase, which began in 1920. In this
phase women rejected both imitation and protest which are two forms of dependency. The
female experience became the source of an autonomous art. They differentiate female and
male writing in terms of language. They extend the feminist analysis of culture to the forms
and techniques of literature. The effort to identify and analyse the female experience leads
Feminist writers
Mary Wollstonecraft: She has strongly raised her voice against the patriarchal
domination over females. She firmly holds her belief that mind does not know sex and
Virginia Woolf: She is profound 20th C feminist. She illustrates the history of
women’s literary writing in patriarchal society where they had no room for their own. They
Gilbert and Gubar: They had influenced the advancement of both the study of female
‘semiotic and symbolic’ from each other and says that all significations are composed out of
Kingston: Kingston recognizes the importance of experience in the very fact of her
writing. She recognized her aunt’s desperation as a woman impregnated out of wedlock and
Conclusion
influence the canon of British and American literature. It brought the new visibility and
legitimacy to often forgotten and under-appreciated female authors. Showalter’s works were
prised for their broad, interdisciplinary approach to literary, cultural and social trends. She
has been highly regarded for calling attention to complex issues surrounding gender and
sexual politics. She insisted the need for “completeness” in discussing women author’s work.
considered as a major contribution to reconstruct the social, political and cultural experience
of women.
Feminist Criticism
Introduction
movement of 1960s. It was not the start of criticism but the renewal of an old tradition of
thought and action already possessing its classic books which had diagnosed the problems of
women’s inequality and proposed solutions. This movement was literary from the start as it
realized the significance of the images of women promulgated by literature. It made the
women to question their authority and coherence. The movement has been crucially
Feminist criticism
During 1980s the feminist criticism became more eclectic and began to draw upon the
findings and approaches of other kinds of criticism like Marxism, structuralism, linguistics
and so on. It switched its focus from attacking male versions of the world to exploring the
nature of the female world and outlook. The lost suppressed records of the female
experiences are reconstructed. The attention was to construct a new canon of women’s
writing by rewriting the history of the novel and of poetry in such a way that neglected
distinction between the terms ‘feminist’, ‘female’ and ‘feminine’. Showalter detects the
feminine phase from 1840 -1880 in which women writers imitated the dominant male
models. The feminist phase from which covers the duration from 1880 to 1920 radical and
separatist positions are maintained. In the final phase mainly considered the female writing
and female experience which began from 1920. She described change in 1970s as a shift of
attention from ‘androtext’ to ‘gynotext’. She coined the term ‘gynocritics’. The subjects of
gynocriticism are the history, styles, themes, geners, structures of writing, psychodynamics of
The feminist criticism has concerned disagreements about the amount and type of
theory that should feature in it. Hence three versions are classified based on the several
distinct features.
1.) Anglo-American
The Anglo Americans maintain major interest in traditional critical concepts like
theme, motif and characterization. The literature was treated as a series of representation of
women’s lives and experience which can be measured and evaluated against reality. The
close reading and explication of individual literary texts are the major concerns of feminist
criticism. The American critic Elaine Showalter is the major representative of this approach.
The French Feminists adopted and adapted the post-structuralist and psychoanalytic
criticism as the basis. French theorists deal with concerns of language, representation and
psychology and travel through detailed treatment of major philosophical issues before
coming to literary text itself. They posited the existence of an ecriture feminine associated
with the feminine and facilitating a different framework for women’s writing.
indicating the strong political and theoretical interests of this kind of feminist criticism.
Literature Teaching Politics Collective is another important group and a series of conferences
and an associated journal. The important figures associated with these groups are Julia
Nature of Language
The female writers are seemed to be suffering the handicap to use a medium of
writing which is essentially male instrument fashioned for male purposes. Virginia Woolf
suggested that languages use is gendered and women had ‘no common sentence ready for her
use’. But Jane Austen devised a perfectly natural language of her own. This thesis that the
language is ‘masculine’ is developed by Dale Spender. She argues that language is not a
The characteristics of women’s sentence are the clauses linked in looser sequence
rather then carefully and patterned as in men. The French theorists posited the existence of
ecriture feminine associated with the feminine and facilitating the free play of meanings
within loosened grammatical structure. The heightened prose works of Helene Cixous, a
French women writer, demonstrated and explained it in her essay ‘The Laugh of Medusa’.
The use of such language is seen as a kind of perennial freedom-fighter in an anarchic realm
of perpetual opposition. This kind of writing is uniquely the product of female physiology.
The notion of the ecriture feminine is expressed in the writing of Julia Kristeva. She
uses the terms symbolic and semiotic to designate two different aspects of language. These
are not two kinds of languages but aspects of language.The symbolic aspect is associated
with authority, order, repression and control. It maintains the fiction that the self is fixed and
unified. This aspect of language is stressed by the structuralists. The semiotic aspect is
Psychoanalysis
The distinction made by Millett between sex and gender is that sex is a matter of
biology whereas gender is a construct which is acquired rather than natural. Simon de
Beauvoir invokes this distinction when she writes ‘One is not born woman; rather, one
becomes women. Millett condemns Freud as the source of the patriarchal attitude against
which feminists must fight. Freud was defended by Juliet Mitchell in her work
‘Psychoanalysis and Feminism’. Freud does not present the feminine as something simply
given and natural. He shows the process of its being produced, constructed and formed by
early experiences and adjustments. Jane Gallop switches from the Freudian and Lacanian
variety. The grounds which are implicit in Freud is explicit in Lacan’s system. All Lacan way
of writing seems to emboby the ‘feminine’ or ‘semiotic’ aspect of language, rather than
‘masculine’ or ‘symbolic’.
Conclusion
The women’s movement is crucially concerned with books and literature so that
influence can be made on everyday conduct and attitudes. Mary Wollstonecraft discussed
male writers like Milton, Pope and Rosseau in ‘A Vindication of the Rights of Women’.
Virginia Woolf portrayed the unequal treatment of women in ‘A Room of One’s Own’. The
male contributors of feminist writing are John Stuart Mill and Friedrich Engels.