1
Book Reviews 277 accorded the respect of a social, economic, and sexual equal. When DeSalvo stays within Woolf’s articulation of her own problems-problems she sees as common to all women-she underscores patriarchal power as the source of women’s imposed inferiority. She meticulously examines her subject’s fiction, nonfiction, essays, arti- cles, and diaries to illuminate this thesis. In the novel Flush, for example, Woolf voices the experiences of Eliz- abeth Browning’s male dog to illustrate that “If you treat a boy the way you treat a girl then men too would be fearful, timid, prone to illness and anxiety and unable to make their way in the world without protection.” In The journal of Mistress Joan Martin, she explores the rela- tionship between the treatment of women and historical forces, which locates the reason for women’s oppression in the social structure. In Orlando, Three guineas, and The years, she develops a mastery of the historical pro- cess to understand the way societal and historical facts impinge on people’s lives. A great portion of her writing is a denouncement of women’s oppression. Woolf saw that female powerlessness was based on gender. She dis- cerned that women are subjected to the most brutal as well as subtle coercion in order to create what is accepta- ble behavior; most women are trained into submissive behavior so as to fit them for a life of domestic unpaid labor and education and opportunity has been denied to women to subvert control and make them dependent on men and privilege. DeSalvo is far more credible when she focuses on Woolf’s broad political views but, like so many of us, even the staunchest, she borrows from spurious psycho- logical ideology when the current institutions which gov- ern our lives and can institute constructive change are frozen within a rigid patrist social system. Nevertheless, she has produced animpressive work; a scrupulous ex- amination of the life and work of Virginia Woolf which weighs heavily in favor of feminist sexual politics. This is a book which will be greatly appreciated and welcomed by Virginia Woolf’s long list of followers, admirers, and scholars. FLOF.ENCE RUSH NEW YORK, NY, U.S.A. READING THE ROMANCE: WOMEN, PATRIARCHY AND POP- ULAR LITERATURE, by Janice A. Radway, 214 pages. Ver- so, London, 1987. f9.95 net. In the autumn of 1980, Janice Radway circulated a ques- tionnaire among a number of women who were regular customers at a suburban bookstore in a midwestern American city. All the women were known afficionadoes of romantic fiction, experts in the ways and by-ways of the genre, although before Radway’s probings they had neither articulated nor realised their expertise. Forty-two completed questionnaires were returned, and from the information these contained and from tape-recorded discussions, Janice Radway formed her conclusions about the popularity of the romantic form with women and about the value of the act of reading itself for the suburban housewife. Her book falls between two allied disciplines. In part it belongs to the field of cultural studies, interpreting audience responses through the analysis of statistical da- ta and bringing a distinct sociological methodology to bear on her material. It also owes much to literary criti- cal approaches in its analysis of narrative structures and its utilisation of both structuralist and feminist critical practice to this end. Radway’s questions are thoughtful and her study as a whole stimulating. Starting with a survey of the produc- tion of popular romances in America in the 1970s and 1980s. she moves on to examine the social conditions of the particular group of readers questioned and the na- ture of the appeal the genre holds for them. In asking first why do women read, and second why do they read romance, Radway develops her thesis to show how the romance satisfies sociologically produced needs. Her sample of readers were mostly insistent that recourse to books-a couple of hours on the sofa immersed in The Flame and The Flower in an afternoon, for example- was one way of creating a private space for themselves, a resistance, Radway suggests, to the burdens of domestic responsibility that otherwise oppressed them. Romance reading in particular, she argues, provides a degree of emotional replenishment for women, and her analysis of the narrative features that constitute the ideal romance is one of the most rewarding sections of her book. She demonstrates that the fantasy world wom- en enter in the love stories they experience is not ulti- mately one of erotic or even romantic fulfilment, but rather one of tenderness and being cared for, as they return, with their fictional counterparts to the childlike state of helpless innocence, enfolded protectively in the lover’s arms. Finding similarities between Nancy Cho- dorow’s theories of female personality development and the history of the ideal romantic heroine, Radway comes to rely on this psychoanalytic reading too intensively, and the final sections of her book reveal a tendency to impose and to generalise from this base. Similarly, despite the impressive array of theoretical material, the assumption at the heart of her study is never fully examined- that the act of reading can be treated as a science and is thus available to scientific models of investigation. It is here that the sociologist and the literary critic must part company, for the at- tempts of the first to categorise resist the insistence of the second on openness and multiplicity, features which Radway’s all too able analysis of romance emphasises rather than reduces. JUDY SIMONS SHEFFIELD Cm- POLYTECHNIC, U.K. WORLDS WITHINWOMEN:MYTH AND MYTHMAKING IN FANTASTIC LITERATURE BY WOMEN, by Thelma J. Shinn, 214 pages. Greenwood Press, Connecticut, 1986. US$29.95 cloth. ALIEN TO FEMININITY: SPECULATIVE FKXON ANDFEMI- NIST THEORY, by Marleen S. Barr, 189 pages. Green- wood Press, Connecticut, 1987. US$32.85 cloth. Shinn and Barr share a number of philosophical as- sumptions characterizing the feminist analysis of cul- ture. Shinn focuses on the influence of myth on women- authored science fiction (SF) and fantasy. “I hope to show in this study,” she states, “that both the truths

Worlds within women: Myth and mythmaking in fantastic literature by women

  • Upload
    hoda-m

  • View
    213

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Worlds within women: Myth and mythmaking in fantastic literature by women

Book Reviews 277

accorded the respect of a social, economic, and sexual equal.

When DeSalvo stays within Woolf’s articulation of her own problems-problems she sees as common to all women-she underscores patriarchal power as the source of women’s imposed inferiority. She meticulously examines her subject’s fiction, nonfiction, essays, arti- cles, and diaries to illuminate this thesis. In the novel Flush, for example, Woolf voices the experiences of Eliz- abeth Browning’s male dog to illustrate that “If you treat a boy the way you treat a girl then men too would be fearful, timid, prone to illness and anxiety and unable to make their way in the world without protection.” In The journal of Mistress Joan Martin, she explores the rela- tionship between the treatment of women and historical forces, which locates the reason for women’s oppression in the social structure. In Orlando, Three guineas, and The years, she develops a mastery of the historical pro- cess to understand the way societal and historical facts impinge on people’s lives. A great portion of her writing is a denouncement of women’s oppression. Woolf saw that female powerlessness was based on gender. She dis- cerned that women are subjected to the most brutal as well as subtle coercion in order to create what is accepta- ble behavior; most women are trained into submissive behavior so as to fit them for a life of domestic unpaid labor and education and opportunity has been denied to women to subvert control and make them dependent on men and privilege.

DeSalvo is far more credible when she focuses on Woolf’s broad political views but, like so many of us, even the staunchest, she borrows from spurious psycho- logical ideology when the current institutions which gov- ern our lives and can institute constructive change are frozen within a rigid patrist social system. Nevertheless, she has produced animpressive work; a scrupulous ex- amination of the life and work of Virginia Woolf which weighs heavily in favor of feminist sexual politics. This is a book which will be greatly appreciated and welcomed by Virginia Woolf’s long list of followers, admirers, and scholars.

FLOF.ENCE RUSH NEW YORK, NY, U.S.A.

READING THE ROMANCE: WOMEN, PATRIARCHY AND POP- ULAR LITERATURE, by Janice A. Radway, 214 pages. Ver- so, London, 1987. f9.95 net.

In the autumn of 1980, Janice Radway circulated a ques- tionnaire among a number of women who were regular customers at a suburban bookstore in a midwestern American city. All the women were known afficionadoes of romantic fiction, experts in the ways and by-ways of the genre, although before Radway’s probings they had neither articulated nor realised their expertise. Forty-two completed questionnaires were returned, and from the information these contained and from tape-recorded discussions, Janice Radway formed her conclusions about the popularity of the romantic form with women and about the value of the act of reading itself for the suburban housewife.

Her book falls between two allied disciplines. In part it belongs to the field of cultural studies, interpreting

audience responses through the analysis of statistical da- ta and bringing a distinct sociological methodology to bear on her material. It also owes much to literary criti- cal approaches in its analysis of narrative structures and its utilisation of both structuralist and feminist critical practice to this end.

Radway’s questions are thoughtful and her study as a whole stimulating. Starting with a survey of the produc- tion of popular romances in America in the 1970s and 1980s. she moves on to examine the social conditions of the particular group of readers questioned and the na- ture of the appeal the genre holds for them. In asking first why do women read, and second why do they read romance, Radway develops her thesis to show how the romance satisfies sociologically produced needs. Her sample of readers were mostly insistent that recourse to books-a couple of hours on the sofa immersed in The Flame and The Flower in an afternoon, for example- was one way of creating a private space for themselves, a resistance, Radway suggests, to the burdens of domestic responsibility that otherwise oppressed them.

Romance reading in particular, she argues, provides a degree of emotional replenishment for women, and her analysis of the narrative features that constitute the ideal romance is one of the most rewarding sections of her book. She demonstrates that the fantasy world wom- en enter in the love stories they experience is not ulti- mately one of erotic or even romantic fulfilment, but rather one of tenderness and being cared for, as they return, with their fictional counterparts to the childlike state of helpless innocence, enfolded protectively in the lover’s arms. Finding similarities between Nancy Cho- dorow’s theories of female personality development and the history of the ideal romantic heroine, Radway comes to rely on this psychoanalytic reading too intensively, and the final sections of her book reveal a tendency to impose and to generalise from this base.

Similarly, despite the impressive array of theoretical material, the assumption at the heart of her study is never fully examined- that the act of reading can be treated as a science and is thus available to scientific models of investigation. It is here that the sociologist and the literary critic must part company, for the at- tempts of the first to categorise resist the insistence of the second on openness and multiplicity, features which Radway’s all too able analysis of romance emphasises rather than reduces.

JUDY SIMONS SHEFFIELD Cm- POLYTECHNIC, U.K.

WORLDS WITHIN WOMEN: MYTH AND MYTHMAKING IN FANTASTIC LITERATURE BY WOMEN, by Thelma J. Shinn, 214 pages. Greenwood Press, Connecticut, 1986. US$29.95 cloth.

ALIEN TO FEMININITY: SPECULATIVE FKXON AND FEMI- NIST THEORY, by Marleen S. Barr, 189 pages. Green- wood Press, Connecticut, 1987. US$32.85 cloth.

Shinn and Barr share a number of philosophical as- sumptions characterizing the feminist analysis of cul- ture. Shinn focuses on the influence of myth on women- authored science fiction (SF) and fantasy. “I hope to show in this study,” she states, “that both the truths