Analyzing the Feminine Identity in Jane Austen’s SocietyA Chapter by Ru BanerjeeA literature review In the twentieth century, there has
been a vast body of feminist scholarship regarding the representation of women
in Victorian art and literature. Deborah Kaplan’s book Jane Austen among Women, providing a stimulating reading on Jane
Austen’s life and work, has been regarded as one of the gems of such feminist
scholarship that offers a fresh, interdisciplinary approach to both Austen’s
life and her literary work. In the book, Kaplan presents an argument about the
position of women and also about the one-on-one relationships among women in the
society that Jane Austen, the novelist herself belonged to. Building a vivid
picture of the “women’s culture” that Austen herself was surrounded by, Kaplan
directs us towards a central question: ‘What made it possible for Jane Austen
to write?’ Seeking an answer to this question, she exemplifies the contemporary
female friendships that represented the socio-cultural context of Austen’s
novels. There is a quirky humor and irony in her observation that men,
including the male biographers, were of little to no relevance in this process
of creative camaraderie, and that these female friendships had actually
threatened “to override the convention of hierarchical and heterosexual union”
(12), which was heavily guarded by men. The uniqueness of Kaplan’s work
underlies the genuinely new perspective on Austen as Kaplan points towards the
existence of the dual cultures in Austen’s times, the dominant culture of
patriarchy and the women’s culture that existed alongside or actually within
patriarchy. At the beginning of the book, Kaplan seems to ask herself: “With
all the discouragement that British and American women writers encountered,
what enabled their literary careers?” (2). Here she is trying to address the
fundamental question regarding the existence and the image of the Victorian
women writers who were starting to explore their public voices in spite of the
powerful social pressures on women to remain silent. Austen belongs to the
particular time-frame in Victorian England when a woman writer’s personal life
had been conceived of as an inexplicably solitary one, existing outside
society. However, Kaplan, in her quest to analyze Austen’s work in relation to
her family and community, dispels the myth of the writer-genius writing in
secret corners of her home. At the same time, she is equally keen to dispel the
myth surrounding Austen’s “hapless, frustrated spinsterhood” as she states that
Austen’s literary career had actually flourished as a result of her self-chosen
spinsterhood. Kaplan’s argument regarding
Austen’s personal choices in life actually paves the way for her discussion of
the microcosm of women’s culture, which enabled women writers including Austen
to speak in their independent voices, while remaining within the constraints of
the dominant patriarchal culture. At the same time, she discusses Austen’s
novels that depicted the lives of women in all their “quaint apparels and
social amusements”, which actually reflected the social realities of her times.
In doing this, she emphasizes Austen’s perception of women who were unique in
both reinforcing the prevailing social expectations of woman and in resisting
the dominant masculine culture that had surrounded them for long. The women in
Austen’s novels, Kaplan argues, reflects her own ambivalence of representing
both the patriarchal culture of domesticity for women as well as embracing the
distinct women’s culture that enabled the independent voice of woman. In
the first few pages of her book, Kaplan takes the readers to the world of
‘genteel domesticity’ of Jane Austen’s England, where she introduces us to some
of the popular ideologies of familial relationships and gender identities of
Jane Austen’s sophisticated gentry. Here she illustrates the concept of genteel
domesticity that emphasizes women’s domestic roles, a culture which was central
not only to Austen’s novels, but which had also been also circulated to Austen’s
social group. “According to this ideology, men and women married for love and
esteem. They experienced passion within their conjugal relationships, and, when
that faded, they sustained an affectionate friendship. They spent much of their
time in one another’s company and lived in the company of their children to
whom they were lovingly attentive. And the setting for these relationships was
always the home, over which women reigned” [17-18]. Marriage, within this social
framework, was regarded as the only means to secure social and economic status,
a theme that was central to most of Austen’s novels. In order to exemplify the
image of the “compliant woman” in Austen’s times, in the second chapter of the
book, Kaplan introduces Anne Lushington, a woman married to the aristocracy.
Lushington, a woman who had been deeply inspired by the domestic ideologies of
those times, had committed herself to a lifetime of marital responsibilities.
However, afflicted by a serious ailment, she grieves her inability to carry on
with the burden of domestic responsibilities in a letter written to her father.
Within the narrative of the letter, she actually represents the familial role
of a woman for whom compliance to the domestic duties of women set up by the
heterosexual society was actually a key to her feminine existence. In the same
chapter, Kaplan discusses the private writings of some of Jane Austen’s
friends, kith and kin, whose responses to this ideology of domesticity, she
states, have largely been characterized by compliance. Kaplan describes the
letters of Fanny Knight, Austen’s niece written to her fiancé, the widower
Edward Knatchbull, as a parallel to the domestic ideologies embraced by Anne
Lushington, while also speaking about other women among Austen’s social circles
who strongly vouched for the ‘ideal of domestic femininity.” However, within this cherished sphere of
‘genteel domesticity’, Kaplan introduces us to the world of unattached women,
either belonging to or visiting traditional families, and she attributes these
visits to social mixing as well as financial support for the women. Some of
these women, Kaplan states, “had never married, although they had probably expected
or hoped to do so.” (21). Kaplan goes on to present the demographics of
unattached, elite women belonging to the aristocracy; women for whom marriage
had not been a compulsion due to the patrilineage customs of the 17th
and 18th Century, that ensured that these women were adequately
supported by their families financially. The choice of assuming spinsterhood
among these women, according to Kaplan, was a reality of the patrilineal
customs, due to which these women did not conceive of the idea of marriage as
something “universally attainable”. While referring to these women and the
companionship they shared with each other through letters, Kaplan analyses the
life and works of Austen and the gentry women of her social circle, who found
sustenance in a kinship which eventually helped each other adapt to their
cherished feminine roles as well as to seek refuge from them. This one-on-one
relationship among Austen and her female friends, she argues, was in reality an
outlet and support system which let the women voice their self-assertion, yet
at the same time, enabled them to embrace the subordinate roles that the
heterosexual society of those times required them to fulfill. “Only to women
did she reveal the power she felt as an author…only with women friends did she
bask in the compliments she received, knowing that they would share her
pleasure.” (106) Not only does Kaplan talk
about the intimate relation between Austen and her female friends illustrated
through letters, but she also goes on to analyze her juvenilia as well as
“middle” work (including Pride and
Prejudice) in respect of the larger social context in order to exemplify
the nature of these unique bonds shared between women. The emotional and
affectionate female alliances in Austen’s works are discussed by Kaplan as she
refers to the more assertive, unconventional portraits of women in her “middle”
fictions, including Lady Susan and The Watsons. Again, in her novel Pride and Prejudice, when Austen focuses
on the “affectionate female friendships” that were interpreted as parallels to
her own female friends, relatives and neighbors, it is the resurfacing of the
woman’s culture as a means of resisting male authority. On one hand, Austen accepts
the domestic ideologies of women with which she has been raised. On the other
hand, she keeps asserting her individuality and the ethical rights of women to
seek ways to attain personal gratification while remaining within the
constraints of patriarchy. Kaplan argues that Austen the writer neither
applauds nor rejects the patriarchal culture, but rather articulates the role
of the prevailing women’s culture of Austen’s times within it. Thus, her
analysis includes the ambivalences and contradictions between personal desires
and established social norms that largely characterize Austen’s life and
work. Again, the subculture of
female-female bonds has been illustrated by Kaplan as a corollary to the woman
artist’s conscious choice of spinsterhood. She assumes that the choice of
spinsterhood as well as of the female friendships in Austen’s literary life
worked as emotional, intellectual resources that provided her the emotional
intimacy of a marriage or a heterosexual relationship. “By assuming the guise
of spinsterhood, Austen may also have been able to reserve more private time to
spend with her most intimate female friends” (122). Here Kaplan intends to draw
our attention towards the unconventional, even subversive values and
expressions that Austen as a woman writer privately shared with other women
within her social circle. Later, in the same chapter, she comments on the
emotional aspect of the interpersonal relationship between Austen and her
female friends: “she derived the support she needed as an adult writer from the
woman’s culture….her woman’s culture provided her with the emotional intimacy
that only wedlock was thought to offer” (130). Kaplan’s assumption made about
Austen’s choice of keeping female friends and choosing to remain single, however,
has been later criticized by scholars including John Halperin as vague and
biased. Halperin, in his review of Jane
Austen among Women clearly states that Kaplan actually avoids truths about
Austen’s young life when she craved the idea of marriage, of having a
financially secure, emotional life of her own. He questions the basic
assumption of Kaplan regarding Austen’s choice of spinsterhood: “Because
biographers had generally assumed that there would be little to say about an
aging unmarried woman’s life, many have been unwilling to take a close look at
it” (110). In his critical review, Halperin refutes this charge by illustrating
examples of alliances that Austen was involved with. For example, he mentions
that “She was devastated by the early defection of Tom Lefroy, with whom she
was in love"a passage in Austen’s life Kaplan chooses to ignore"and that of a
young clergyman (about whom little is known) she met while on holiday in Devon
in 1801.” (Halperin 96) In his
review, Halperin also points towards Kaplan’s biased views regarding Austen’s
choice of spinsterhood and her affinity towards the women’s culture. Rather, he
expresses that contrary to Kaplan’s idea that these female friendships offered
her intense emotional satisfaction, Austen actually detested most of the women
among her social circles. His research suggests that Austen actually craved for
a husband and a home, and an establishment and income of her own, while she
wanted to escape from the company of these females. Halperin’s criticism of the
depiction of Austen’s life, then, makes us question Kaplan’s basic assumption
that Austen became a successful woman writer because she chose to stay single,
and preferred her “female alliances more important than heterosexual
relationships”( Kaplan 157). Halperin argues that a closer look at any of
Austen’s biographies would reveal that Austen’s single status was not something
chosen by her, but rather destined for her. At the same time, he looks into the
contradictions between Austen’s personal and literary life that portrays both
her subversive nature and her ambivalence towards the dominant patriarchal
culture that had surrounded her. For example, Halperin analyzes the novels of
Austen including Pride and Prejudice
where Austen as a writer deliberately focuses on heterosexual endings by
joining Elizabeth and Darcy in a happy marriage, while as a person she
privately denies these conventional plots due to her subdued ‘feminist agenda’. While in her novels, she embraces the ideology of domesticity by
contriving conventional heterosexual acts, in her personal life, she is the
spinster torn between her desire for a home, her desire for economic
establishment, and her female social circle. Claudia Johnson’s Jane Austen: Women, Politics and the Novel,
on the other hand, points out that while Austen entered the uncharted territory
of English novels in the 18th Century dominated entirely by men, the
fact that she was a woman prompted people to look at and assess her artistic
enterprise in different ways than the male writers of her times: “The fact that
Austen is a female novelist has made assessments of her artistic enterprise
qualitatively different from those of her male counterparts. Because of it, she
has been admitted into the canon on terms which cast doubt on her
qualifications for entry and which ensured that her continuous presence there
would be regarded as an act of gallantry” (14). In
the same chapter of her book, Johnson refers to a letter which Austen addresses
her ‘talentless’ nephew, describing her own literary works as “little bit (two
inches wide) of ivory” [Letters, 16 December 1816]. Analyzing the ‘self-deprecating
letter’ of Austen, Johnson argues that such a notion fostered by Austen can be
explained as a natural outcome of how women artists had been viewed by the
patriarchal hierarchy where works by females had to appear within ‘carefully
restricted boundaries’. Johnson’s analysis of Austen’s works seeks to uncover
the political, cultural, and literary history
of her times, while she considers Austen’s own gender identity of a female as a
“crucially significant factor” that determined the major works of her fiction. However, even while working in a literary
world dominated by men and their histories, Johnson points towards Austen’s
depiction of a powerful heroine in Emma, who controls her home, her choice of a
life partner, her community, representing the female artist that Austen herself
aspired to be. Looking into Johnson’s analysis of Austen’s novels, as we get to
explore beneath the apparently subordinate roles of women within the family
system, we also understand how Austen examines the conventions of patriarchy as
she subtly validates the rights of female authority within the social context
of her novels. Today,
while a huge body of feminist critics focus on the feminist elements and also
on the role of the woman artist in Austen’s works of fiction, the questions
that both Kaplan and Johnson address in their books about Austen’s identity as
a female artist have been crucial in terms of defining the ‘feminine’
sensibilities of her novels. Susan Gubar and Sandra Gilbert in The Madwoman in the Attic: the Woman-Writer
and the Nineteenth Century Literary Imagination pointed out that most of
the women represented in a typical Austen novel, with all their attributes of
dutifulness, submissiveness and self-control, ultimately worked to accommodate
themselves “to men and the spaces they provide”. In the book, while examining the representation
of women by women writers in the 19th Century, they have argued that
the dichotomy between the pure, dedicated “domestic angels” and the rebellious,
unkempt “madwomen” was a result of the women writers’ struggle that emerged
from the patriarchal culture of categorizing female characters. Analyzing the
categorizations and the dichotomy that characterized the act of categorizing, Gubar
and Gilbert claims that woman writers should strive for a definition of the
woman characters beyond this dichotomy; however, their options remain
constricted by the patriarchal point of view. On the other hand, critics like Alistair M.
Duckworth in The Improvement of the
Estate: A Study of Jane Austen’s Novels try to analyze how Austen portrays
her heroines who “support and maintain an inherited structure of values and
behavior”, heroines who emerge from isolation and despair to be reintegrated to
the mainstream of society. These heroines, Duckworth find out, are basically
the products of the Austen’s vision that portrays the tension between claims of
the society and the claims of the woman as an individual. For Duckworth, the
concepts of ‘estate’ and of its proper ‘improvement’ stand for Austen’s values
and her artistic responses to the contemporary social forces that she
encountered as a woman writer. Although on the surface, Duckworth in the book
intends to speak of the role of the landed gentry in Austen’s fictional work,
in essence, he speaks of the woman writer’s struggle to find the proper balance
between a woman’s individuality and her societal values and responsibilities. Seen in
this light, we can say that Kaplan’s analysis of Austen’s life and works brings
to the core not only the essential questions regarding Austen’s feminine
identity that wavers between confirming to patriarchal ideologies and resisting
those ideologies. Looking into these feminist discourses centering on the life
and works of Austen, including Kaplan’s, we actually discover new, unique
pathways that help us rediscover the themes and styles of Austen’s fiction
characterized by these essential feminine questions. Works Cited Duckworth, Alistair M. The Improvement of the Estate: A
Study of Jane Austen's Novels. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins U.P., 1971. Gubar, Susan, and Sandra Gilbert. The
Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth Century Literary
Imagination. 1979. New Haven: Yale U.P., 1984 Halperin,
John. Jane Austen among Women. by Deborah Kaplan. Review. Nineteenth Century Literature 48.1
(1993): 96. Johnson,
Claudia. Jane Austen: Women, Politics and the Novel.
Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1988. Print. Kaplan,
Deborah. Jane Austen among Women.
Baltimore: John Hopkins UP, 1992. Print. © 2013 Ru Banerjee |
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Added on January 29, 2013 Last Updated on January 29, 2013 Tags: Jane Austen, victorian women, women, victorian literature AuthorRu BanerjeeOmaha, NEAboutNot a phenomenal woman, rather an ordinary one...in love with the mountains, the azure skies, sandy beaches with gushing waves, with the cup of my morning coffee, and with my husband! Not in that orde.. more..Writing
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