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Feminist Literary Criticism: From Anti-Patriarchy to Decadence

Feminist Literary Criticism: From Anti-Patriarchy to Decadence

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IN DEFENSE OF PATRIARCHY<br />

<strong>Feminist</strong> <strong>Literary</strong> <strong>Criticism</strong>: <strong>From</strong><br />

<strong>Anti</strong>-<strong>Patriarchy</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Decadence</strong><br />

Anne Barbeau Gardiner<br />

The “tiny, embattled band” that<br />

launched feminist criticism thirty<br />

years ago has produced, in the words of<br />

one of its his<strong>to</strong>rians, “a widespread and<br />

well-known field of study.” In fact, according<br />

<strong>to</strong> one Modern Language Association<br />

survey, feminist criticism in recent<br />

times has had “more impact on the<br />

teaching of literature” than any other<br />

school. 1 It is claimed <strong>to</strong> be “already an<br />

indispensable part of the study of literature”<br />

in universities in Britain, Canada,<br />

and the United States. 2<br />

In this essay I shall examine a handful<br />

of current works that illustrate the nature<br />

and goals of feminist criticism as an<br />

ideology. First, I will analyze what feminist<br />

critics are saying about patriarchy;<br />

second, what they propose as their criteria<br />

for selecting works <strong>to</strong> replace the great<br />

canon of Western literature; and third,<br />

how they now celebrate a decadence<br />

reminiscent of the Roman empire at the<br />

full measure of its decline.<br />

<strong>Patriarchy</strong><br />

To begin, what do feminist critics mean<br />

by the term patriarchy? According <strong>to</strong><br />

Judith Bennett, in her recent work His<strong>to</strong>ry<br />

ANNE BARBEAU GARDINER is Professor Emerita of<br />

English at John Jay College and the author of<br />

several works on the poetry of John Dryden.<br />

Matters, patriarchy is the “central problem”<br />

of women’s his<strong>to</strong>ry, and even “one of<br />

the greatest general problems of all<br />

his<strong>to</strong>ry.” 3 She herself admits that nowadays<br />

the average woman dismisses the<br />

term as an outdated “bugbear.” She recounts<br />

how Jane Fonda once remarked<br />

that “patriarchy is very much alive and<br />

well, and we have <strong>to</strong> do something about<br />

it,” and her interviewer Emma Brockes<br />

replied that patriarchy is an “anachronism”<br />

and that “lots of women would<br />

bridle at the suggestion they are victims<br />

of a patriarchal system.” Bennett is distressed<br />

at Brockes’s reply and insists that<br />

patriarchy is “essential <strong>to</strong> the future of<br />

feminism.” As evidence she points <strong>to</strong> Ida<br />

Blom and other feminists who set out in<br />

the 1990s <strong>to</strong> write a global his<strong>to</strong>ry of<br />

women and discovered that they could<br />

agree on “only one common theoretical<br />

framework: patriarchy.” According <strong>to</strong><br />

Sylvia Walby, no other term is as useful <strong>to</strong><br />

describe the “system” by which “men<br />

dominate, oppress and exploit women.” 4<br />

Bennett warns us, however, not <strong>to</strong> focus<br />

on the origins of patriarchy, for that<br />

could lead <strong>to</strong> the naive notion that there<br />

are real biological differences between<br />

men and women. <strong>Feminist</strong>s “know,” she<br />

says, that patriarchy is something “contingent,<br />

constructed, and subject <strong>to</strong><br />

change.” And thanks <strong>to</strong> transsexuals, they<br />

also realize that women cannot be “clearly<br />

Modern Age 393


identified” by their bodies: “There is, in<br />

other words, no stable subject, no coherent<br />

thing called ‘women’—at the heart of<br />

either feminism or feminist his<strong>to</strong>ry.” 5 For<br />

Bennett the words patriarchy and women<br />

are useful constructs in a power-struggle,<br />

but they have no referents in nature, biology,<br />

or objective reality.<br />

Her view goes back <strong>to</strong> Simone de<br />

Beauvoir, who in The Second Sex presented<br />

women’s nature as something<br />

constructed by patriarchy, but so cunningly<br />

done that the construction looked<br />

like nature and was thought <strong>to</strong> be unchangeable.<br />

Such a denial of nature is<br />

now current in feminist ideology. Ruth<br />

Robbins, in her recent work <strong>Literary</strong> Feminisms,<br />

lists among the oppressions women<br />

have endured by being “formed under<br />

patriarchy,”<br />

physiological oppressions which attack<br />

women by virtue of their bodies (childbearing<br />

and rearing defined as “women’s work,”<br />

or the fact that women are physically less<br />

powerful than men, and can be subjected <strong>to</strong><br />

violence and rape). 6<br />

Note well that Robbins accuses patriarchy<br />

of having defined “childbearing” as<br />

“women’s work” and thus having deceived<br />

unsuspecting females for millennia. Without<br />

this construction, who knows if<br />

women would ever have stumbled on<br />

motherhood? Similarly, in the recently<br />

published Cambridge Companion <strong>to</strong> <strong>Feminist</strong><br />

<strong>Literary</strong> Theory, Nancy Armstrong<br />

declares that the “power” women had<br />

over “child-rearing” in the nineteenth<br />

century was “in no way natural” <strong>to</strong> them. 7<br />

Not natural because for feminist critics,<br />

every phase of motherhood (except abortion)<br />

is a patriarchal conspiracy <strong>to</strong> oppress<br />

women. Welcome <strong>to</strong> the paranoia<br />

that passes for “truth” among these ideologues,<br />

“where there is no rational universe<br />

<strong>to</strong> know.” 8<br />

Ironically, despite their fierce opposition<br />

<strong>to</strong> a patriarchy consisting of white<br />

males, feminist critics from the start have<br />

mostly followed the teaching of three<br />

white European males—Michel Foucault,<br />

Jacques Derrida, and Jacques Lacan. In<br />

1986 Elaine Showalter warned that “the<br />

feminist appropriation of Marxism was a<br />

form of dependency on male models.” By<br />

then, however, Marx had already been<br />

replaced by the above three French nihilists.<br />

<strong>From</strong> that point on, the dependency<br />

of feminist critics on male models became<br />

even more pronounced. Lacan had<br />

pride of place on their altar because of his<br />

assault on the Western “humanist notion<br />

of self as unique and individual.” He viewed<br />

both characters inside a text and people<br />

outside a text as “functions within language,”<br />

and thus made it impossible for<br />

his adherents <strong>to</strong> consider biological differences<br />

as “foundational.”<br />

In his light, Julia Kristeva sees light and<br />

exclaims, “woman as such does not exist.” 9<br />

Enlightened in her turn, Sharon Marcus<br />

demands a change of language <strong>to</strong> give<br />

women more power over rapists. Instead<br />

of the old “rape script” that shows woman<br />

as “violable, and fearful,” she wants a new<br />

“script” where the “female body” is “born<br />

in<strong>to</strong> a discourse that figures it as potent”<br />

and a possible “agent of violence.” 10 If<br />

Marcus can really believe that a different<br />

“rape script” will strike terror in the heart<br />

of a rapist, she must have the sort of faith<br />

that moves mountains. If only it were not<br />

placed in such an apostle!<br />

In like manner, Nancy Armstrong argues<br />

that “if literate members of modern<br />

culture do in fact think of themselves as<br />

novels, and have for at least two centuries,<br />

then novels must influence events.”<br />

I fear I have lived a sheltered life, because<br />

I have never met one of those literate<br />

people who “think of themselves as novels.”<br />

Armstrong believes so fervently that<br />

we are a function of language that she<br />

thinks literate people had <strong>to</strong> start by accepting<br />

a linguistic world divided between<br />

men and women before they could<br />

“inhabit those categories, marry, throw<br />

parties, spend their money, and repro-<br />

394 Fall 2007


duce themselves in both children and<br />

novels accordingly.” 11 In this passage, she<br />

puts children and novels on a par as texts<br />

in which literate people reproduce themselves.<br />

This is no laughing matter. Ideological<br />

feminism is not a harmless eccentricity,<br />

but wields great power in the universities<br />

of the West. For years now, burning incense<br />

before the above-mentioned<br />

French gurus has led <strong>to</strong> “respectable career<br />

opportunities” in universities “open<br />

<strong>to</strong> progressive perspectives.” 12 In sum,<br />

though women <strong>to</strong>day regard the term<br />

patriarchy as an outdated bogey, cadres<br />

of feminist critics entrenched in academe<br />

brandish it as the execrated name of the<br />

common enemy. The word patriarchy for<br />

them has, in effect, the same power that<br />

the word “popery” had in seventeenthcentury<br />

England as a rallying cry <strong>to</strong> unite<br />

those who would otherwise be utterly<br />

divided among themselves.<br />

Replacing the Great Canon<br />

<strong>Feminist</strong> critics want <strong>to</strong> replace the great<br />

canon of Western literature because, they<br />

say, it was mostly men who composed<br />

those works and male critics who vouched<br />

for their greatness. It would be one thing<br />

<strong>to</strong> add <strong>to</strong> the great canon the works of<br />

those deserving women whose memory<br />

had been effaced because of prejudice.<br />

But this task, far advanced by now, is not<br />

radical enough for the feminist ideologues<br />

who want <strong>to</strong> eliminate the canon al<strong>to</strong>gether.<br />

Rita Felski dismisses the great<br />

canon as “strikingly narrow,” a “restricted<br />

diet” prepared by “white men” whose judgment<br />

of beauty was prejudiced and whose<br />

language was full of “gendered meanings.”<br />

True, the great works have been praised<br />

as “universal,” but Felski replies that feminists<br />

have “a hard time with the notion of<br />

universality.” Firmly rejecting the view<br />

that “we are all pretty much the same,” she<br />

asserts that the differences between us<br />

are in no way “superficial; they go all the<br />

way down.” All the way down? She explains<br />

further that there is no “universal<br />

essence of the human,” no shared humanity<br />

beneath the diversity. No wonder she<br />

is glad <strong>to</strong> say that the literary worth of the<br />

great canon is no longer “eternal and<br />

unshakable,” 13 for as R. V. Young points<br />

out, the great works are about our shared<br />

humanity: they remind us “of our specifically<br />

human nature, with its measure of<br />

rational and spiritual freedom from the<br />

constraints of the material order.” 14<br />

After the great canon has been<br />

deconstructed, how does a feminist critic<br />

go about making a counter-canon? On<br />

what basis does she decide what <strong>to</strong> include<br />

and what <strong>to</strong> exclude? Since the<br />

1990s various sub-cultures have been<br />

clamoring <strong>to</strong> be given a share in women’s<br />

studies and complaining about the prominence<br />

of dead white females like Austen,<br />

the Brontës, Eliot, and Woolf. How <strong>to</strong><br />

satisfy them all? Linda Anderson remarks<br />

that since “diversity has no limits, the<br />

desire for inclusivity was also bound <strong>to</strong><br />

founder on its own impossibility.” But<br />

Ellen Rooney is more optimistic: she believes<br />

that “fragmentation” among feminists<br />

merely leads <strong>to</strong> a “dissemination of<br />

feminisms” and “the diaspora of feminist<br />

discourses,” because, “when feminism<br />

divides, it multiplies.” She sees the feminist<br />

project as vast and invulnerable—<br />

“so large, so diverse, and so entrenched<br />

that it simply expands <strong>to</strong> accommodate<br />

each new debate.” 15<br />

Rita Felski, however, offers some sobering<br />

advice <strong>to</strong> feminist critics. She warns<br />

them not <strong>to</strong> explain why they select certain<br />

works and exclude others from their<br />

canon. They must make “tacit value judgments,”<br />

not explicit ones, and must be<br />

“wary about spelling out the basis for<br />

such judgments” for fear of being “accused<br />

of elitism.” Silence might seem the<br />

better part of valor in the face of Rashmi<br />

Varma, who angrily complains that “While<br />

conferences, faculties, curricula, and feminist<br />

social science in general did open up<br />

Modern Age 395


<strong>to</strong> women of color, the category of race<br />

was consistently consigned <strong>to</strong> a subordinate<br />

position, and institutional structures<br />

that privileged white dominance remained<br />

in place.” For Varma, the revolution<br />

is not going far enough fast enough,<br />

even though, as Young observes, “the<br />

accumulated wisdom of centuries of<br />

Western Civilization” is being steadily<br />

replaced in colleges by “culture studies”<br />

that “focus on marginalized groups and<br />

trendy social issues.” 16<br />

Felski grieves that “What began as a<br />

stirring challenge <strong>to</strong> a sacred canon of<br />

great books has as its none-<strong>to</strong>o-happy<br />

endpoint a paralyzing anxiety about any<br />

explicit act of evaluation.” Even so, she<br />

sees the present impasse as inevitable,<br />

because an explicit evaluation of literature<br />

would mean erecting a hierarchy,<br />

and “hierarchy means patriarchy.” 17 Ah,<br />

patriarchy again. But is it true that feminists<br />

can never establish an objective,<br />

ascending order of merit in literary works<br />

without letting patriarchy in through the<br />

back door? This looks suspiciously like a<br />

political maneuver, an appeal <strong>to</strong> the bogey-man<br />

<strong>to</strong> silence the clamor for inclusion.<br />

One might well ask at this juncture<br />

whether it would be fair for feminist critics<br />

<strong>to</strong> make only tacit “value judgments”<br />

when including or excluding works from<br />

their canon. Critics are surely bound <strong>to</strong><br />

make their criteria explicit so as not <strong>to</strong> be<br />

thought prejudiced or arbitrary. Besides,<br />

what’s good for the goose is good for the<br />

gander: feminists have long accused the<br />

“patriarchy” of tacitly hiding “masculinist”<br />

prejudices under the cloak of objectivity.<br />

Felski admits there are intractable divisions<br />

among feminists, but she hopes<br />

that despite their differences, women can<br />

still “enjoy, empathize, or learn from works<br />

of art that explore worlds different from<br />

their own.” 18 Strange. After she has declared<br />

that the differences between<br />

people go “all the way down” and that<br />

there is no “universal essence of the human,”<br />

she suddenly wants women from<br />

diverse backgrounds <strong>to</strong> read each other’s<br />

works with empathy. Surely, if that could<br />

happen, then these ultra-feminists might<br />

go a step farther and read the works of the<br />

great canon with empathy. Or does her<br />

point about the value of exploring “worlds<br />

different from their own” not apply <strong>to</strong> the<br />

literary treasures of Western civilization?<br />

Ruth Robbins also sees literature as<br />

his<strong>to</strong>rically “specific” and never “transcendent.”<br />

She repudiates the great canon<br />

on the ground that it was only politics<br />

that caused some books <strong>to</strong> be included<br />

under the rubric of greatness and others<br />

<strong>to</strong> be excluded. No longer must we allow<br />

the category of great literature <strong>to</strong> remain<br />

“unquestioned and unexamined.” No<br />

longer must we “tamely” grant those<br />

works the “privileged” status of “universality,<br />

truth and transcendence.” Instead,<br />

we need <strong>to</strong> create a new aesthetics of<br />

“gender and class.” We also need <strong>to</strong> let<br />

many “traditions” flourish because traditions<br />

are good—of course, not in the case<br />

of the Great Tradition—when they are<br />

constructed by “sub-cultures and<br />

marginalised groups” like lesbian women<br />

seeking out “their own identities.” Finally,<br />

we need politicized readers who no longer<br />

look for “value in the au<strong>to</strong>nomous text,”<br />

but ask instead “whether the study of<br />

literature needs a concept of value at all.”<br />

Yet, can there really be a literature<br />

without a “concept of value”? French feminist<br />

Julia Kristeva decided <strong>to</strong> refuse the<br />

term “literature.” But Ruth Robbins warns<br />

that literature is a “privileged term,” so<br />

feminists must lay claim <strong>to</strong> the “value<br />

attached <strong>to</strong> the word/concept of literature,”<br />

or they will reposition “women readers<br />

and writers as somehow less important,<br />

more marginal <strong>to</strong> the claims of ‘real’<br />

literature.” 19 In short, she tells her fellowfeminists<br />

<strong>to</strong> get rid of “literature” as something<br />

with aesthetic and moral value, but<br />

<strong>to</strong> keep the word itself. For the word can<br />

serve as a fig leaf <strong>to</strong> hide their naked<br />

politics.<br />

396 Fall 2007


Having dismissed the great works as<br />

proper objects of study, ideological feminists<br />

give their scholarly attention <strong>to</strong><br />

books that were written by, or for women,<br />

even when these have a merely popular<br />

appeal. Nickianne Moody openly questions<br />

the usefulness of distinguishing<br />

between high and low culture. 20 Massmarket<br />

romances written by women are<br />

now <strong>to</strong> be critically examined for what<br />

they reveal about female desire. Indeed,<br />

as Felski notes, there is already a growing<br />

body of feminist critical work dealing<br />

with female pleasure in reading. Robbins<br />

remarks that under the rubric of “literature”<br />

her fellow-feminists include works<br />

once banished as “inappropriate, improper,<br />

obscene.” 21 Obscene? <strong>Feminist</strong><br />

silence about the objective criteria for<br />

evaluating literature now becomes feminist<br />

loquacity about the desires and pleasures<br />

of women readers, including, as we<br />

will see, the supposed pleasures of sadism<br />

and masochism.<br />

The Celebration of <strong>Decadence</strong><br />

Let me begin this section with an anecdote.<br />

I have been a member of the American<br />

Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies<br />

for around thirty years. Many years<br />

ago I was invited <strong>to</strong> chair a panel at the<br />

annual conference—it was a panel of three<br />

women who would all give papers on the<br />

works of the Marquis de Sade. I immediately<br />

declined, and in a letter I explained<br />

briefly that de Sade was <strong>to</strong>o decadent <strong>to</strong><br />

deserve our serious scholarly consideration<br />

and urged the Society not <strong>to</strong> allow<br />

a panel on his pornography. Despite my<br />

plea, the panel went ahead without me,<br />

and I was not asked again <strong>to</strong> chair another<br />

panel—though this turned out <strong>to</strong> be a<br />

good thing, since I began at that point <strong>to</strong><br />

organize my own panels on literature and<br />

religion. A short while later I was cheered<br />

<strong>to</strong> read Roger Scru<strong>to</strong>n’s very fine essay,<br />

published in the Times <strong>Literary</strong> Supplement,<br />

in which he accused the scholarly<br />

world of decadence for giving de Sade<br />

serious consideration. At first I wondered<br />

why young feminist scholars would even<br />

consider giving papers on de Sade, but I<br />

soon learned that they were in lockstep<br />

behind Simone de Beauvoir, whose essay<br />

“Faut-il Bruler Sade?” had rehabilitated<br />

the pornographer as a serious writer. Following<br />

the lead of de Beauvoir, Kristeva<br />

incredibly ranked de Sade as on a par with<br />

Shakespeare and Racine. 22<br />

Certainly, the Western world has seen a<br />

seismic change in sexual morality in the<br />

last generation, but what many people do<br />

not realize is that the decadence pervasive<br />

in the mass media is also found in parts<br />

of our universities. Take the lack of concern<br />

for truth. Judith Bennett, a medieval<br />

his<strong>to</strong>rian, urges other his<strong>to</strong>rians <strong>to</strong> “avoid<br />

heteronormativity” in their works. 23<br />

Surely, if truth matters, how can his<strong>to</strong>rians<br />

avoid the reality that it was indeed<br />

the norm for two millennia of Christian<br />

his<strong>to</strong>ry for sexual intercourse <strong>to</strong> be limited<br />

<strong>to</strong> a man and a woman in marriage?<br />

What she is advising is that homosexual<br />

politics should trump his<strong>to</strong>rical truth.<br />

Bennett says she was troubled at first<br />

<strong>to</strong> discover that there were only fifteen<br />

known lesbians in the “entire medieval<br />

millennium.” In that case, how could she<br />

avoid heteronormativity in telling the<br />

s<strong>to</strong>ry of medieval women? She solved the<br />

problem by inventing a new word—lesbian-like.<br />

Pres<strong>to</strong>, she could link <strong>to</strong> her fifteen<br />

medieval lesbians all the women<br />

whose lives “offered opportunities for<br />

same-sex love”—all the nuns living in<br />

“single-sex communities” and all the<br />

women living in the single state—the still<strong>to</strong>-be-married,<br />

the spinsters, and the widows.<br />

Thus, without a qualm, she dragooned<br />

a multitude of women in<strong>to</strong> a big imaginary<br />

lesbian tent. The word lesbian-like, Bennett<br />

says, facilitates the “development” of a<br />

“usable past” for lesbians and the “reform”<br />

of women’s his<strong>to</strong>ry. 24 Reform? This<br />

is hardly reform. It’s a re-invention of the<br />

past with no regard for truth.<br />

Modern Age 397


Bennett tells us in passing that she<br />

“first had sex with another woman in 1973.”<br />

What business is that of ours? And note<br />

the phrase had sex. Must she speak of her<br />

private conduct in such a coarse way? Is<br />

there <strong>to</strong> be no difference any more between<br />

professional writing and tell-all<br />

television shows? By the way, she is hardly<br />

an obscure figure in the Canadian academy,<br />

for she was recently asked <strong>to</strong> revise<br />

a textbook on the Middle Ages and add<br />

“more women’s his<strong>to</strong>ry.” She did it, she<br />

says, but only because it is “the best deal<br />

we can get, for now,” though it leaves the<br />

“master narrative” intact. 25 Naturally, she<br />

wants <strong>to</strong> revamp the “master narrative”<br />

and erase heteronormativity from all of<br />

medieval his<strong>to</strong>ry. And who in Canada will<br />

tell her no?<br />

There were feminists before Bennett<br />

who wished <strong>to</strong> dragoon all women in<strong>to</strong> a<br />

big imaginary lesbian tent, as for example<br />

Adrienne Rich, who proposed a lesbian<br />

“continuum” that included the relationships<br />

between mother and daughter, between<br />

sisters, and between friends, and<br />

who even urged women <strong>to</strong> rethink all<br />

their connections with other women as a<br />

form of “resistance <strong>to</strong> their sexualisation<br />

by patriarchal culture.” 26 Of course, if we<br />

were only a function of language, then<br />

vastly enlarging the meaning of the word<br />

lesbian would change a lot. But we are not<br />

a function of language. His<strong>to</strong>ry in reality<br />

is not just a word-construct that can be<br />

arbitrarily deconstructed and reconstructed<br />

by “discursive practices.” We<br />

betray our ances<strong>to</strong>rs when we give public<br />

monies in support of such a mockery of<br />

his<strong>to</strong>ry.<br />

A prime example of the contemporary<br />

celebration of decadence in women’s studies<br />

is Rita Felski’s appreciation of the<br />

“lesbian picaresque.” This is a new genre<br />

exemplified by, among other works, Jane<br />

De Lynn’s Don Juan in the Village and<br />

Michelle Tea’s Valencia. Felski regrets that<br />

these works have not “made as much of a<br />

splash as they deserve,” but she remedies<br />

this by giving them careful scholarly attention.<br />

In these novels, there is no veiling<br />

of the “nitty-gritty details” of what<br />

lesbians do in bed. Rather, sex and violence<br />

are here “inextricably intertwined”<br />

and the “soothing rituals of sadomasochistic<br />

sex” can be found. Soothing rituals of<br />

sadomasochistic sex? The implication is<br />

that she approves of these perversions. In<br />

Don Juan, Felski says, the lesbian protagonist<br />

is unembarrassed about her rampant<br />

“lust” for women; she fills the chapters<br />

with the details of her anonymous onenight<br />

stands, and expresses a yearning for<br />

the “calm purity of utter degradation.” 27<br />

Purity of utter degradation? Is this a work<br />

that should be taught in a classroom?<br />

Such authors resemble suicide bombers<br />

hellbent on self-destruction and on the<br />

destruction of as many as they can reach.<br />

Come <strong>to</strong> think of it, suicide bombers are<br />

not so bad, since they kill only bodies, not<br />

souls.<br />

Ah, but Felski appreciates “the ebullient<br />

glee with which these novels kick<br />

over the pedestal of female virtue.” The<br />

pedestal of female virtue? There’s nothing<br />

left <strong>to</strong> kick in the West but a few<br />

broken pieces of that pedestal. How can<br />

Felski enjoy a glee in what is obviously<br />

diabolical? She remarks blandly that we<br />

are faced <strong>to</strong>day with the “routinizing of<br />

transgression,” because “subversion” like<br />

this has become the “daily grist for the<br />

academic mill.” 28 Who would not weep <strong>to</strong><br />

hear that pornography is routine fare now<br />

for young people in the universities? Instead<br />

of fearing an imaginary “patriarchy,”<br />

feminists would do well <strong>to</strong> fear the<br />

abyss opening at their feet. They will be<br />

held accountable someday for leading<br />

in<strong>to</strong> antisocial and criminal actions those<br />

they were trusted <strong>to</strong> educate.<br />

Another example of the contemporary<br />

celebration of decadence in women’s studies<br />

is found in Leila J. Rupp’s essay, “When<br />

Women’s Studies Isn’t about Women:<br />

Writing about Drag Queens.” 29 Rupp, the<br />

chair of Women’s Studies in the Univer-<br />

398 Fall 2007


sity of California at Santa Barbara, discusses<br />

in these few pages the research for<br />

her recent book about drag queens, telling<br />

how she and her partner spent considerable<br />

time at a club in Key West, Florida. 30<br />

Rupp celebrates the “bawdy shows” where<br />

drag queens wander in<strong>to</strong> the audience<br />

“<strong>to</strong> grope and fondle men and women,”<br />

use foul language, and mimic sex acts on<br />

stage. Rupp even describes in detail the<br />

night she joined the drag queens and<br />

reports that she felt “powerful disguised<br />

as a man dressing as a woman.” 31 For this<br />

research, Rupp received financial support<br />

from women’s studies at Ohio State,<br />

and her book was published by the University<br />

of Chicago Press.<br />

Rupp says her book is useful for teaching<br />

students “concepts of social constructionism”<br />

because a drag queen is a unique<br />

“gender category.” Women’s studies, she<br />

says, need <strong>to</strong> open up <strong>to</strong> “ambiguity and<br />

contradiction: tittie queens with breasts<br />

and penises, transgendered men with<br />

male chests and no bot<strong>to</strong>m surgery having<br />

penis-in-vagina gay sex with gay men.”<br />

And yet, she wonders whether women’s<br />

studies can “hold <strong>to</strong>gether” if we are “uncertain<br />

what our central concepts mean,”<br />

or whether “they exist at all”? 32 I can only<br />

reply, I hope not.<br />

There is a direct line connecting Simone<br />

de Beauvoir—who first <strong>to</strong>ok up the perversions<br />

of de Sade as a subject for feminist<br />

literary criticism—with Ruth Robbins,<br />

Judith Bennett, Rita Felski, Leila Rupp,<br />

and all the other feminist ideologues who<br />

use their learning, university positions,<br />

and even public funds <strong>to</strong> subvert literary<br />

and moral values. What began as a tiny<br />

movement in the 1970s has become a<br />

grave danger <strong>to</strong> the young, especially <strong>to</strong><br />

young women. And since college students<br />

are the leaders of the future, what is at<br />

stake now is the very foundation of Western<br />

society and civilization.<br />

1. Rita Felski, Literature after Feminism (Chicago<br />

and London, 2003), 5. 2. Ruth Robbins, <strong>Literary</strong><br />

Feminisms (New York, 2000), 265. 3. Judith M.<br />

Bennett, His<strong>to</strong>ry Matters: <strong>Patriarchy</strong> and the Challenge<br />

of Feminism (Philadelphia, 2006), 54, 80. 4.<br />

Ibid., 151, 155, 57, 56. 5. Ibid., 80, 60, 9. 6. Robbins,<br />

15. 7. Nancy Armstrong, “What feminism did <strong>to</strong><br />

novel studies,” in The Cambridge Companion <strong>to</strong><br />

<strong>Feminist</strong> <strong>Literary</strong> Theory, edited by Ellen Rooney<br />

(Cambridge and New York, 2006), 105. Eight of the<br />

thirteen contribu<strong>to</strong>rs <strong>to</strong> this volume are American.<br />

8. Bonnie Mann, Women’s Liberation and the<br />

Sublime (Oxford and New York, 2006), 4. 9.<br />

Robbins, 38, 113, 115; Kari Weil, “French feminism’s<br />

écriture féminine,” in Cambridge Companion, 160.<br />

10. Sharon Marcus, “Fighting Bodies, Fighting<br />

Words: A Theory and Politics of Rape Prevention,”<br />

in Judith Butler and Joan Scott, eds., <strong>Feminist</strong>s<br />

Theorize the Political (1992), cited in Ellen<br />

Rooney, “The literary politics of feminist theory,”<br />

Cambridge Companion, 89-92. 11. Armstrong, Cambridge<br />

Companion, 106-108. 12. Mann, 4. In footnote<br />

5 on this page we read that the link between<br />

“loyalty <strong>to</strong> postmodernism and academic acceptance”<br />

was noted earlier in Susan Bordo’s Unbearable<br />

Weight (1993), Naomi Schor and Elizabeth<br />

Weed’s The Essential Difference (1994), and Barbara<br />

Christian’s “The Race for Theory,” in Radically<br />

Speaking (1996). 13. Felski, 14-16, 141. 14. R.<br />

V. Young, At War with the Word: <strong>Literary</strong> Theory and<br />

Liberal Education (Wilming<strong>to</strong>n, Del., 1999), x, 101.<br />

15. Linda Anderson, “Au<strong>to</strong>biography and the<br />

feminist subject,” in Cambridge Companion, 127;<br />

Linda Rooney, “Introduction,” Cambridge Companion,<br />

14-15. 16. Felski, 165; Rashmi Varma, “On<br />

common ground?: feminist theory and critical<br />

race studies,” in Cambridge Companion, 245; Young,<br />

11. 17. Felski, 165. 18. Ibid., 42. This is especially<br />

strange because, on page 139, she ridicules those<br />

who defend great literature on the ground that “it<br />

is a way of being taken out of yourself in<strong>to</strong> a different<br />

world.” A few pages later, she uses the very same<br />

argument <strong>to</strong> make feminists from different backgrounds<br />

read each other’s works. 19. Robbins,<br />

126 (citing Kristeva), 117. 20. Nickianne Moody,<br />

“Feminism and popular culture,” Cambridge Companion,<br />

177. 21. Felski, 54; Robbins, 9. 22. Simone<br />

de Beauvoir, “Faut-il Bruler Sade?” in Privilèges<br />

(Paris, 1955), 11-89; Kristeva is cited in Robbins,<br />

126. 23. Bennett, 119. 24. Ibid., 110, 118, 123, 125-<br />

27. 25. Ibid., 114, 135-37. 26. Robbins (citing Rich),<br />

202. 27. Felski, 109-13. 28. Ibid., 78. 29. Leila J.<br />

Rupp, in Exploring Women’s Studies: Looking Forward,<br />

Looking Back, edited by Carol Berkin, Judith<br />

L. Pinch, and Carole S. Appel (Upper Saddle<br />

River, N.J., 2006), 57-67. 30. Leila J. Rupp and<br />

Verta Taylor, Drag Queens at the 801 Cabaret<br />

(Chicago, 2003). 31. Rupp, 64. 32. Ibid., 59.<br />

Modern Age 399

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