Sexual textual politics Feminist literary theory.doc
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1、Sexual/ Textual PoliticsToril MoiFor Showalter, the only way a feminist can read the book properly is by remaining “detached from its narrative strategies”; and if she manages to do so, she will see that Room is in no way a particularly liberating text: “If one can see A Room of Ones Own as a docume
2、nt in the literary history of female aestheticism, and remain detached from its narrative strategies, the concepts of androgyny and the private room are neither as liberating nor as obvious as they first appear. They have a darker side that is the sphere of the exile and the eunuch”. For Showalter,
3、Woolfs writing continually escapes the critics perspective, always refusing to be pinned down to one unifying angle of vision. This elusiveness is then interpreted as a denial of authentic feminist states of mind, namely the “angry and alienated ones”, and as a commitment to the Bloomsbury ideal of
4、the “separation of politics and art”. This separation is evident, Showalter thinks, in the fact that Woolf “avoided describing her own experience”. Since this avoidance makes it impossible for Woolf to produce really committed feminist work, Showalter naturally concludes that Three Guineas as well a
5、s Room fail as feminist essays.The major drawback of this approach the crypto-Lukcsian perspective is surely signaled in the fact that it proves incapable of appropriating for feminism the work of the greatest British woman writer of this century, despite the fact that Woolf was not only a novelist
6、of considerable genius but a declared feminist and dedicated reader of other womens writings. It is surely arguable that if feminist critics cannot produce a positive political and literary assessment of Woolfs writing, then the fault may lie with their own critical and theoretical perspectives rath
7、er than with Woolfs texts. But do feminists have an alternative to this negative reading of Woolf? Let us see if a different theoretical approach might rescue Virginia Woolf for feminist politics.Showalter wants the literary text to yield the reader a certain security, a firm perspective from which
8、to judge the world. Woolf, on the other hand, seems to practise what we might now call a “deconstructive” form of writing, one that engages with and thereby exposes the duplicitous nature of discourse. In her own textual practice, Woolf exposes the way in which language refused to pinned down to an
9、underlying essential meaning. According to the French philosopher Jacques Derrida, language is structured as an endless deferral of meaning, and any search for an essential, absolutely stable meaning must therefore be considered metaphysical. There is no final element, no fundamental unit, no transc
10、endental signified that is meaningful in itself and thus escapes the ceaseless interplay of linguistic deferral and difference. The free play of signifiers will never yield a final, unified meaning that in turn might ground and explain all the others. It is in the light of such textual and linguisti
11、c theory that we can read Woolfs playful shifts and changes of perspective, in both her fiction and in Room, as something rather more than a willful desire to irritate the serious-minded feminist critic. Through her conscious exploitation of the sportive, sensual nature of language, Woolf rejects th
12、e metaphysical essentialism underlying patriarchal ideology, which hails God, the Father or the phallus as its transcendental signified. But Woolf does more than practise a non-essentialist form of writing. She also reveals a deeply sceptical attitude to the male-humanist concept of an essential hum
13、an identity. For what can this self-identical identity be if all meaning is a ceaseless play of difference, if absence as much as presence is the foundation of meaning? The humanist concept of identity is also challenged by psychoanalytic theory, which Woolf undoubtedly knew. The Hogarth Press, foun
14、ded by Virginia and Leonard Woolf, published the first English translations of Freuds central works, and when Freud arrived in London in 1939 Virginia Woolf went to visit him. Freud, we are tantalizingly informed, gave her a narcissus.For Woolf, as for Freud, unconscious drives and desires constantl
15、y exert a pressure on our conscious thoughts and actions. For psychoanalysis the human subject is a complex entity, of which the conscious mind is only a small part. Once one has accepted this view of the subject, however, it becomes impossible to argue that even our conscious wishes and feelings or
16、iginate within a unified self, since we can have no knowledge of the possibly unlimited unconscious processes that shape our conscious thought. Conscious thought, then, must be seen as the “overdetermined” manifestation of a multiplicity of structures that intersect to produce that unstable constell
17、ation the liberal humanists call the “self.” These structures encompass not only unconscious sexual desires, fears and phobias, but also a host of conflicting material, social, political and ideological factors of which we are equally unaware. It is this highly complex network of conflicting structu
18、res, the anti-humanist would argue, that produces the subject and its experiences, rather than the other way round. This belief does not of course render the individuals experiences in any sense less real or valuable; but it does mean that such experiences cannot be understood other than through the
19、 study of their multiple determinants-determinants of which conscious thought is only one, and a potentially treacherous one at that. If a similar approach is taken to the literary text, it follows that the search for a unified individual self, or gender identity or indeed “textual identity” in the
20、literary work must be seen as drastically reductive.It is in this sense that Showalters recommendation to remain detached from the narrative strategies of the text is equivalent to not reading it all. For it is only through an examination of the detailed strategies of the text on all its levels that
21、 we will be able to uncover some of the conflicting, contradictory elements that contribute to make it precisely this text, with precisely these words and this configuration. The humanist desire for a unity of vision or thought (or as Holly puts it, “for a non-contradictory perception of the world”)
22、 is, in effect, a demand for a sharply reductive reading of literature-a reading that, not least in the case of an experimental writer like Woolf, can have little hope of grasping the central problems posed by pioneering modes of textual production. A “non-contradictory perception of the world,” for
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