Feminism in English Literature
Inequalities have existed since the dawn of
civilization and women have been fighting against all sorts of discriminations:
legal, economic, religious and social. The various factors responsible for
their suppression were misogyny, romantic glorification and patriarchy.
Irrationally romanticized, they were not allowed to play a significant role as
independent, self confident individuals. This was compounded by other unjust social,
political and biological factors which produced a rationale or opposition to
their rights. As a consequence, they did not enjoy a comfortable position in
society.
Women in the recent past have launched
a liberation movement called Feminism demanding equal rights and equal status
for themselves. Feminism means “the belief and aim that woman should have
the same rights and opportunities as men”.1 In other
words, “Feminism is a collection of movements aimed at defining,
establishing, and defending equal political, economic and social rights and
equal opportunities for women. Feminists are persons whose beliefs and behavior
are based on feminism.” 2 Precisely defining “feminism
can be challenging, but pragmatically, a broad understanding of feminism includes
women acting, speaking and writing on women’s issues and rights, identifying
social injustice in the status quo and bringing their own unique perspective to
bear on issues”.3
Feminism has emerged as a worldwide
movement to secure women's social, political, legal, moral & cultural
rights on the one hand and love, respect, sympathy and understanding from males
on the other. Feminism recognizes the inadequacy of male - created ideologies
and struggles for the spiritual, economic, social and racial equality of women,
sexually colonized and biologically subjugated. It is a concept emerging as a
protest against male domination and the marginalization of women. It focused
women’s struggle for recognition and survival and made them realize that the
time has come when they should stop suffering silently in helplessness. Then
only they can develop their moral and intellectual potentialities and
qualities.
Diverse cultures, societies and situations do
make women diverse in nature, but there are certain issues which are universal
to the whole of womankind. A woman of any origin, belonging to any strata of
society goes through emotional upheavals in life. In her work The Feminine
Mystique, Betty Friedan who is regarded as the harbinger of the
second wave of American feminism brings out the fact that ‘women, who
apparently have everything to make them happy and comfortable, cannot trace the
source of dissatisfaction and the cause of the emotional distress that they
suffer’. A woman is never regarded as an autonomous being since she has always
been assigned a subordinate and relative position. The modern woman does not
find any sense in such self- sacrifice and yearns for self-expression,
individuality. She is trying to free
herself of the dependence syndrome.
Feminism, concerns women’s cause, their
subjugation to men folk, their inferior status, their exploitation- physical,
social, political, economic. Feminists all over the world have been raising
such issues with a pious wish that the women must be considered equal to men.
They should not be discriminated because of their sex. They have been generally
forced to fell anguish and anxiety. Thus feminism is a movement giving
voice to women’s subordinated position in society and discrimination,
encountered by them because of sex. So, equality, freedom and justice are
central to the movement of feminism for bringing about a radical change in
society. Margaret Benton’s views are very relevant in this connection. She
writes:
We are feminists
because we believe not only that
the evidence shows
the oppression of women, but,
further, that such
oppression is wrong. We also
believe that society
should be changed to end all
forms of oppression.4
The feminist perspective on literature, whether
in a third world country or elsewhere, has had to confront issues of similar
persuasion: male chauvinism, sexist bias, psychological and even physical
exploitation, hegemonistic inclination is not merely the male but also the
female sections of society, the utter disregard for the females psychological,
cultural, familial and spiritual quests. Feminism recognizes the inadequacy of
male created ideologies and struggles for the spiritual, economic, social and
racial equality of woman sexually colonized and biologically subjugated.
Feminism is a concept emerging as a protest against male domination and
marginalization of woman. But the development of feminist thought at the outset
of this century has brought about a perceptive change in our outlook towards
woman. Now, women are one with man and not their “otherness”.
Women were not demanding only equal rights and equal status, but they
also resisted the insidious power of the literature that forced them to
suppress their feelings and approved the patriarchy as the only viable solution
to a social order. Feminist scholarship originates and participates in the
larger efforts of feminism to liberate women from the structures that have
marginalized women and as such, it seeks to redefine ideas of male and female.
Feminists claim that literature bears the stamp of male domination. A major
portion of literature has been written from the male point of view either by
ignoring or suppressing woman’s point of view. The ideology of gender is
inscribed and it is produced and reproduced in cultural practice. Feminists
examine experiences of the women from all races, classes and cultures. The
traditional images of women as an evil force, a temptress, an inferior being,
and as an impediment in man’s spiritual path have been totally discarded in
favor of a more human, egalitarian image mainly due to the efforts of the
feminists and the male humanists. In short the main
motive of Feminist is to make women conscious about their struggle for
recognition and survival and made them realize that the time has come when they
can save themselves from the anguish and anxiety of the modern world,
which they bear silently in helplessness.
Feminism has its antecedents going all the way back to
ancient Greece. Feminism also surfaces in Chaucer’s Wife of Bath, who blatantly values experience over authority. After
the French Revolution, Mary Wollstonecraft in A Vindication of the Rights of Women argued that the ideals of the
Revolution and Enlightenment should be extended to women, primarily through
access to education. Mary Wollstonecraft posits that
women should be given the same rights as that of men. Then only they can
develop the moral and intellectual potentialities and equalities. The
nineteenth century witnessed the flowing of numerous major female literary
figures in both Europe and America, ranging from the Brontes, Jane Austen,
George Eliot and Elizabeth Barrett Browning to Margaret Fuller and Emily Dickinson.
Modernist female writers include Hilda Doolittle, Gertrude Stein, Katherine
Mansfield, Virginia Woolf, Sylvia Plath and Kamala Das etc. So, it is clear
from that ever since antiquity women have been fighting to free themselves from
the oppression by their male counterparts which is responsible for their anguish
and anxiety.