Feminist Criticism
Feminist Criticism
Feminist Criticism
2
The Laugh of Medusa
- Helene Cixous
The Laugh of Medusa
Cixous advocates
heavily for the idea that
women need to write.
The essay has become a staple of feminist criticism because of its incisive critique of
patriarchal politics, its endorsement of a feminist philosophy that is grounded in
poststructuralism and psychoanalytic theory, and its modeling or representation of
the possibilities of “Ecriture Feminine” (“feminine writing”)—what Cixous calls white
ink.
In her notion of white ink, she embraces aspects of female experience that have
been denigrated: sexuality, sisterhood, and motherhood.
White ink, a metaphor for écriture féminine, is likened to the “good mother’s milk.”
In this way, white ink is marked writing; it designates the writing from the female
body. As such, white ink is associated with breast milk. It is nourishing although,
abstractly, difficult to define and read because it is almost invisible. White ink appears
as experimental writing because it thwarts traditional forms and subject matter in its
objective of capturing female experience, psychology, and desire.
• Females have been historically defined as "not men” :
Because females have been historically defined as "not men," their sense of self
has been determined by how they must lack something that men have.
Phallocentrism, a male-dominated, masculine-coded linguistic and philosophical
system—or, to put it more simply, male bias—keeps women from accessing
their own stories. Without this access, women lack knowledge of the multiple
ways to be; women, thus, have no body and are thus nobody.
Thus, her agenda in “The Laugh of the Medusa” is to call into question and
break from the existing literary and social order and to embrace a new vision
for women and literature.
7
Towards A Feminist Poetics
- Elaine Showalter
• The author dissects the history of women’s literature into three phases –
( The feminist criticism must be free from the divided
consciousness of ‘daughters’ and ‘sisters’. )
1840-1880 1920 Onwards
FEMININE 1880-1920
FEMALE
FEMINIST
1 • Feminist Critique
• Feminist criticism can be divided into two varieties.
2 • Gynocritics
• During the Feminine phase, (1840 – 1880) women wrote in an
effort to equalize the intellectual achievements of the male culture
and internalized its assumptions of female nature. The distinguishing
sign of this period is the male pseudonym.
• In the Feminist phase (1880 – 1920) women reject the
accommodation postures of femininity and used literature to
dramatize the ordeals of wronged womanhood.
• In the Female phase (1920 onwards) women rejected both imitation
and protest. They considered these two as forms of dependence.
Instead, they turn to female experiences as the source of
autonomous art.
• She propounds that it is Black women who are in the best possie to create an
effective criticism, that provides a non-discriminatory consideration of the roles played
by race, gender, class, and sexuality in literature.
• She proclaims that this critical move is necessary not only for the impact it will have on
literary criticism generally, but also to offer a deeper understanding of the literature of
Black women specifically.
• She wraps up her essay by doing a “Black feminist” reading of Toni Morrison’s novel
“Sula”.
Thank you