Sunday 19 March 2017

"It is ironic that the beasts are often more humane than the humans." Consider at least two of the stories from the collection in the light of this comment.

'The Bloody Chamber' is a short story collection by Angela Carter. Throughout the stories, beasts are often portrayed as more humane than the humans; thereby making the case ironic.
In 'The Tiger's Bride', the tiger merely wishes to see Beauty naked in order to satisfy his desires however, after Beauty's response to 'put a bag' on her head and 'pull up her skirt', the Beast feels pity towards her conditioned way of thinking. The girl has been conditioned to view the loss of her virginity as a forced, inevitable act and because of this, the Beast forms 'a single tear' in sadness for her. This is Gothic duality as the Beast in the story possesses human qualities, perhaps more so than the humans themselves, so this creates a sense of irony. Carter has chosen to present the Beast in this way to show how society is losing the grasp on humanity and becoming desensitised.
Lack of humanity is highlighted clearly  in Carter's sinister adaption of 'Little Red Riding Hood'; 'The Snow Child'. The count is conveyed as predatory in this story and after conjuring up the snow child, she shortly dies. In despair, the Count 'thrusts his virile member into the dead girl'. This act of necrophilia is deeply shocking to both the original and modern readership as it shows the animistic nature. To be 'human' is usually being composed and civilised however the Count is being relentless. This contrasts to the Beast in 'The Tiger's Bride' as here, the human feels no sympathy to his female victim whereas the Beast seemed to possess the human qualities of pity.
In 'The Werewolf', the Beast is the Wolf. On discovering the Wolf, the girl 'cuts off his paw' without hesitation. Carter may have chosen to use numb, detached narration here to show how children have become desensitised by fear. The villagers, at the end of the story 'stone her (the grandmother) to death' in suspicion that she was a witch because of the 'witch's nipple' on her hand. This ruthless killing demonstrates the power of superstition and this is shocking to the modern day readership  because today's society doesn't maintain superstitious beliefs and so this way of life displayed in 'The Werewolf' comes across as inhumane. The Wolf turns out to be a human therefore the other humans response to it can be seen as ironic.
Moving back to 'The Tiger's Bride', the beast is represented as an equal to the humans, so much so that Beauty grows fond of him. This is transgression in that the supernatural is being accepted in to the real world, it could be said to conform to Baudrillard's theory of hyper reality as the character of the Tiger is played so 'straight' that the reader doesn't question why a Beast is living alongside humans. At the end of the story, Beauty allows the Beast to 'lick the skin off' her and becomes a tiger too. Arguably she chooses to let the Tiger do this as she recognises that animals possess more humane qualities than humans so by completing the Gothic element of metamorphosis, she can live a more civilised lifestyle. A psychoanalytical critic might comment on the idea that Beauty identifies that she must leave behind her humanity in order to become more humane, this is ironic in that the reader would expect their roles to be reversed and that it should be the Beast who needs humanity.
The Marquis in 'The Bloody Chamber' holds many inhumane qualities. The girl discovers one of his wives in his chamber 'pierced by hundreds of spikes... newly dead'. This shocking imagery gives the implication that the Marquis possesses vampiristic qualities and finds pleasure in torturing his wives. By providing him with elements of sado-masochism, Carter is presenting him as inhumane, he is a predator obsessed with killing. This takes the idea of a patriarchal society to the extremes. This act conforms to Gothic excess, displaying how women are seen merely as objects of pleasure, easily disposable and quickly replaced. Using hyperbolic language, Carter is hinting at the potential for corruption and the possibility of a complete loss of humanity.
In conclusion, in the majority of the stories from 'The Bloody Chamber', Beasts are quite often presented as being more humane than the humans. Human characters are nearly always presented as corrupt or having the potential to be corrupted. They are shown as predatory, emotionless and desensitised; it is the Beasts that posses feeling and emotion, they have a firmer hod on humanity than the humans themselves.

Band 5/30 marks.

Thursday 23 February 2017

To what extent is gender stereotypes reinforced or challenged in your chosen story from Carter’s ‘The Bloody Chamber’.

Angela Carter deconstructs and transforms the core elements of traditional tales and motifs. She does this by dismantling the long established depictions of women within the fairy tale genre (which are perceived to be ‘frail’ and ‘helpless’). By re-telling the stories of well-known fairy tales in her collection, she exposes ‘societal ideals within the original tales which were used to perpetuate Christian patriarchal concepts as a means of maintaining the gender hierarchy’1- this is an issue which was previously identified by Bettelheim. However, Carter re-shapes these tales by inverting their traditional narrative structure and draws them out of their conventional fairy tale format, separating them from conventional child stories or folk tale, and into a dark, erotic exposure or gender and sexuality. This is made clear through her innovative use of the Gothic, which allows Carter to marginalise the norm and occupy a more central cultural place- this method is used to transgress the limits of what is commonly accepted of a gender. The definition of gender stereotypes is ‘[not] how females (and males) really are, but the way that a given culture or sub-culture sees them, how they are culturally constructed.’2 this definition means that gender identity is determined by a patriarchal society. Carter however aims to deconstruct the traditional structures in order to direct the reader’s attention to contemporary problems, mostly related to her feminist viewpoint.
Gender stereotypes are challenged in The Bloody Chamber (TBC) by the Mother figure, who inverts the typical female Gothic stock character. Originally in the tale of Blue Beard (BB) the story TBC is based upon, it is the brother who saves the protagonist as in traditional Gothic structures, the mother would be presented as a passive figure, but Carter alternatively deconstructs this profile and presents the reader with a ‘complex’3 and ‘forceful’4 feminist vision of an ‘avenging angel’5. This gives her the ability to strip the Marquis of his masculine superiority and make him ‘impotent at last’6. To overcome the Marquis the Mother uses her husbands ‘service revolver’7 to kill him ‘without a moment’s hesitation’8- Carter said she did this to ‘decolonis[e]… our habits of thought’9.  One interpretation of this ending can be seen as Carter showing a synonymous relationship between man and woman, as one cannot overcome an obstacle without the other, or Carter could be presenting the idea that women have the potential to surpass the stereotypical limitations through opportunities that transgress the norm, as once the ‘[Marquis] is vanquished by the mother and daughter [the] victimisation of women is overturned’10. This remodels the outcome of the stereotypical story-as female autonomy becomes the happy ending rather than female subservience to males. On the other hand, another translation may be Carter displaying female emancipation which is only possible through the symbol of male power- the ‘service revolver’11 (used to kill the Marquis) is symbolic of a phallus- this is because in the contextual time period the tale is set, women believed they needed male power to overcome obstacles. However in later tales of Carter’s collection, such as The Erl King (TEK) or The Lady of the House of Love (TLOTHOL), the heroines use their own female power to be liberated from male subservience. This is symbolic as the first story in the collection (TBC) shows females depending on the power of males but the last tale in the collection Wolf Alice (WA), it shows an equilibrium of power between both sexes- therefore Carter’s collection of tales significantly tracks feminism through the ages.
However, gender stereotypes are reinforced in TBC through Carter’s use of Gothic conventions such as: characters, settings and plot developments. An example of Carter’s Gothic conventions can be identified in the heroine, as she embodies the two stereotypical versions of gothic women- the innocent virgin and the seductress. For instance a key moment when the virginal heroine displays characteristics of naivety and innocence, commonly associated with women, is when the heroine is at the opera performance of ‘Tristan’12- used as a device to foreshadow the love triangle which occurs later in the tale. It is there, as she catches herself in the mirror, she sees herself through the eyes of the Marquis who watched her with the ‘assessing eye of a connoisseur’13, a gaze which implies his carnal desire to consume and feed off of her purity. She sees the ‘sinuous shift of white muslin tied with a silk string under the breasts…[,] his wedding gift…a choker of rubies… clasped around [her] throat…[and] sensed in [her]self a potentiality for corruption.’14 This image further foreshadows the Marquis’ wish to decapitate the heroine as the choker previously belonged to his Grandmother who wore it to show she had ‘escaped the guillotine’15 at the time of the French Revolution. Nonetheless, it is not until after he had corrupted her chastity that she came to realise it was her ‘innocence that captivated him’16, Schanoes believed this was Carter ‘highlighting the social construction of female masochism and sexual passivity’17, as the Marquis’ attraction to innocence and naivety could be a reflection of mankind as a collective. This attitude was common in previous times (such as the Victorian era) as women were brought up to be innocent and sexually ignorant- as it could impede on their families honour. Not only does the  predatory Marquis represent the male sex as a collective, but the heroine is representative of the female collection, this can be seen after the heroines lost her ‘virginity’18 in the Marquis’ bedroom she believes that at that moment there are ‘a dozen husbands impal[ing] a dozen brides’19. This insinuates a history of women who have been victims of violent abuse or unhappy marriages which she identifies herself a part of, it is E. B. Manley who argues that 'the mirror scenes establish the protagonist as oscillating between girlhood and womanhood, between a patriarchal view and her own definition of herself'20. Likewise in WA, mirrors play a vital role as it enlightens the protagonist to her own power, once she realises her reflection is her shadow her perspective shifts from animal objectivity to human subjectivity, changing the female stereotype. This may be Carter signifying a universal need to alter the way society understands female sexuality and identity.
Alternatively, the heroine embodies the seductress. After recognising her innocent image was one that had been produced through the social conditioning of a phallocentric culture (which desired the domination over the female object) it helped her to gain female independence-along with her increased knowledge of sexuality and violence, partly due to her experience of the bloody chamber. Carter uses the symbol of bloody chamber within all her tales, as it is through this that her protagonists gain enlightenment which allows them to metamorphosis and escape the binds of their sexual oppression. The heroine almost succeeds in seducing her husband, by using his male desire of innocence against him, ‘If he had come to me in bed, I would have strangled him’21, through the reality of her death after seeing his past wives perversely ‘strung up’22, ‘disembodied’23 and ‘denuded of flesh’24 -which was created through female submission- she is no longer naive. This may be Carter making a feminist statement through her exploration of gender and female sexuality. Carter may have been influenced by the different contested positions feminism had debated such as: pornography, sexuality, violence and the representation of women. These issues intensified in the late 1970’s and 80’s, which may have significantly influenced Carter’s work. Carter uses issues such as pornography to disprove feminist ideas that they reflect ‘a sort of distilled essence of the entrenched binaries of patriarchal gender relations, the conflict revolved around the extent to which pornographic representations could be appropriated’25 Carter instead suggests an alternative that can empower women. This is seen in her other tales such as In the Company of Wolves (ITCOW) where the protagonist refuses to be a victim and when presented with the inevitable rape conforms to her own ideals instead of the conventional.
The concept of gender stereotype is constructed, inverted and transformed in TBC through Carter’s use of deconstruction to the core elements in traditional tales. This may be to force the reader to radically question their beliefs surrounding cultural construction and thus gender stereotype and gender sexuality. This is reinforced through the use of Gothic stock characters, which display the cultural stereotype in which she deconstructs and transforms the characters to present the reader with a different aspect to women in the fairy tale genre and sexuality to encourage change. By deconstructing the fairy tale form, Carter highlights the societal ideals (such as patriarchy) within the original tales, and reveals its corrupt purpose-which is to maintain the gender hierarchy which ensures women remain submissive to a phallocentric culture. In particular she condemns the female characteristic of passivity and nativity. She shows this through the bloody chamber which displays a fatal consequence to previous submissive female characters. This is symbolic of an endless cycle which is caused by a patriarchal society which warrants the objectification and possession of women to a male dominance.
Word Count :1507


Bibliography
1 http://hilo.hawaii.edu/academics/hohonu/documents/Vol07x07HappilyEverAfter.pdf
2  The Critical Anthology Article 4
3 Kari E. Lokke ‘Bluebeard and The Bloody Chamber: The Grotesque of Self-Parody and Self-Assertio’
4 Kari E. Lokke ‘Bluebeard and The Bloody Chamber: The Grotesque of Self-Parody and Self-Assertio’
5 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 39
6 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page
7 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 40
8Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 41
9Angela Carter, Feminist Review: Issue 42: Feminist Fictions, https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=hNWNPSSPnOMC&pg=PT35&dq=%27attempts+to+decolonise+our+habits+of+thought%27&hl=en&sa=X&ei=dqMqVenmAczxaO6qgKgL&ved=0CCAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q='attempts%20to%20decolonise%20our%20habits%20of%20thought'&f=false
10 Old Wine in New Bottles (the analysis of cultural constructions of femininity in A.Carter’s “The Bloody Chamber”, Page 123, file:///C:/Users/Elizabeth/Downloads/Mik_2012_15_1_23%20(1).pdf
11 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 40
12 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 3
13 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 6
14 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 6
15 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 6
16 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 16
17 Professor Veronica L Schanoes, Fairy Tales, Myth, and Psychoanalytic Theory: Feminism and Retelling the Tale, https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wlqUBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA89&lpg=PA89&dq=%E2%80%98highlighting+the+social+construction+of+female+masochism+and+sexual+passivity%E2%80%99&source=bl&ots=Df_XWggpUC&sig=JwXubfJT_VnLuBYhuNUUEYXvm-s&hl=en&sa=X&ei=b7cqVaGMEYfXapelgeAM&ved=0CCYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%E2%80%98highlighting%20the%20social%20construction%20of%20female%20masochism%20and%20sexual%20passivity%E2%80%99&f=false
18 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 14
19 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 14
20Danielle Marie Roemer and Cristina Bacchilega, “Angela Carter and the Fairy Tale”, P87, https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=mcLy81hgirIC&pg=PA87&lpg=PA87&dq=%27the+mirror+scenes+establish+the+protagonist+as+oscillating+between+girlhood+and+womanhood,+between+a+patriarchal+view+and+her+own+definition+of+herself%27&source=bl&ots=zyjE1QpYP3&sig=KHM-sOqkvht4Vwj--L7OcchrKEE&hl=en&sa=X&ei=YrkqVeecAoP6aJzDgdgK&ved=0CCIQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q='the%20mirror%20scenes%20establish%20the%20protagonist%20as%20oscillating%20between%20girlhood%20and%20womanhood%2C%20between%20a%20patriarchal%20view%20and%20her%20own%20definition%20of%20herself'&f=false
21 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 34
22 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 27
23 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 27
24 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 27
25 Danielle Marie Roemer and Cristina Bacchilega, “Angela Carter and the Fairy Tale”, P37, https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=mcLy81hgirIC&pg=PA37&lpg=PA37&dq=%E2%80%98reflected+a+sort+of+distilled+essence+of+the+entrenched+binaries+of+patriarchal+gender+relations,+the+conflict+revolved+around+the+extent+to+which+pornographic+representations+could+be+appropriated%E2%80%99&source=bl&ots=zyjE1QnZRc&sig=H7yCb-bwaux4B7v4i02qsVN6qSc&hl=en&sa=X&ei=ErIqVY7zOdjnaq_3gYgI&ved=0CCMQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%E2%80%98reflected%20a%20sort%20of%20distilled%20essence%20of%20the%20entrenched%20binaries%20of%20patriarchal%20gender%20relations%2C%20the%20conflict%20revolved%20around%20the%20extent%20to%20which%20pornographic%20representations%20could%20be%20appropriated%E2%80%99&f=false

"Compare and contrast the ways Charlotte Bronte and Jean Rhys have used a range of narrative methods to explore the journey of their protagonists."

Both ‘Jane Eyre’, by Charlotte Bronte, and ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, by Jean Rhys, are written in the genre of bildungsroman, in which the reader follows the journey of their protagonists from childhood to adulthood. Charlotte Bronte structures her novel 'Jane Eyre' in a classical Victorian format as the story moves in a chronological linear time-frame which is narrated by a single character, this story explores an isolated child who develops and thrives in Victorian society through submission and inheritance. However, Jean Rhys uses a post-modernist style which uses multiple narrative voices and a non-chronological structure which appears fragmented, exposing Antoinette’s gradually disintegrating mind due to the effects of the patriarchal society which entraps her. Ultimately both texts use different narrative methods to display a vast difference in the journey’s experienced by their protagonists.

Both protagonists experience isolated childhoods, which influence the way in which they develop to adulthood. Jane is an alienated and lonely child at Gateshead which is caused by the rejection she receives by the Reed’s. Through the language device of pathetic fallacy, Bronte has reflected her ‘saddened’1 heart through the weather. The words used to describe the weather are harsh and blunt; the wind is ‘cold’2, the clouds ‘sombre’3 and the rain ‘penetrating’4 exposing Jane’s emotional feelings of confinement. Furthermore the pronouns ‘I’5 and ‘me’6 are used to highlight the emotional barriers between herself and the other characters. However, Jane’s detachment is not enough to stop her poor treatment, as she is continually bullied by Mrs Reed’s ‘darlings’7- especially by John Reed, who is determined to ‘punish’8 Jane for being a ‘dependent’9 calling her vicious names such as a ‘rat’10. Furthermore, a feminist critic would observe the injustice of Jane's treatment by the ‘Master’11 of the house as in the 19th Century, Victorian society was patriarchal-a structure which ensured women were submissive to men due to their lack of legal rights.

Similarly, the protagonist Antoinette experiences rejection and isolation. Jean Rhys used the background of the Post Emancipation Act which created an atmosphere of mistrust and violence in society. This symbolised through Antoinette’s garden that is as ‘large and beautiful as that garden in the bible’12 (The Garden of Eden) which becomes ‘wild’13 with ‘snaky looking’14 objects. The snake is a motif used throughout to symbolise evil and corruption. This is to show the racial tension which is first presented at the start of the book with the use of pronouns and battle jargon- ‘They say when trouble comes close ranks, and so the white people did.’15 Which shows how the creoles can be ‘accepted neither by the negro community nor by the representatives of the colonial centre.’16 Because of this, Antoinette is seen as ‘nothing’17 to either race. This ultimately made Antoinette feel threatened (due to her mother’s horse being ‘poisoned’18 –at the start of the story- by the angry ex-slaves) so she tries to seek feelings of safety and comfort within her mother, but is rejected by Annette who tells her daughter ‘oh let me alone’19. This is a significant moment in Antoinette’s life as she becomes ‘useless’20 to her mother. This ultimately fuels her desperation for emotional acceptance by Rochester to the point of self-destruction.

But both protagonists deal with their obstacles in different ways. Jane is undeterred by her lonely childhood she still has lessons to learn which will help her to overcome the obstacles she will encounter in the future. The first main lesson Jane must learn, is that her fiery ‘passion’21 must be tamed; this lesson is learnt in the ‘red room’22 which she is entrapped within by Mrs Reed, and would only be ‘liberated’23 on the condition of ‘perfect submission and stillness’24. A feminist critic would understand the vital lesson of submission. This was a lesson every Victorian woman had to learn if they wanted to be successful, as they had no rights in a marriage. 18th Century English jurist William Blackstone described a woman’s legal status within marriage as ‘in law a husband and wife are one person, and the husband is that person’25. In addition, a post-colonial critic would observe the description given to Mrs Reed- ‘skin was dark’26- which gives her a distinct un-English quality. The original readership would understand that this was only reserved for villainous characters. This reflects the attitude of mistrust towards foreigners in a 19th Century England that had little experience of other cultures. Additionally, the strength of Jane’s character is continually tested through various experiences Jane encounters, for example whilst at Lowood she challenges the hypocrisy of organised religion which through Bronte’s structural use of journalism, for example stating it was ’five o’clock’27 on the ‘19th of January’28. With this, in addition to the genre of ‘The Conditions of England’, it presents the immoral events as fact. An example of this is when Mr Brocklehurst, who claimed he was strict Anglican, removed the donated money, intended for the orphaned children, to pay for his family who ‘were splendidly attired in velvet, silk and furs’29. The incongruity is taken further when Brocklehurst insists on cutting the curls off one of the orphaned girls to then have his wife and children parade around the institution with a ‘false front of French curls’30.

Alternatively, unlike Jane, Antoinette is unable to overcome her problems in childhood which is evident when she gradually dismantles which is shown through the texts structure as it becomes more frequent in its fragmentation. Rhys shows Antoinette’s inability to act on the issues which ultimately entrap her. This is foreshadowed through Annette’s parrot Coco who had his wings ‘clipped’31 by Mr Mason before Coulibri was set aflame by the ex-slaves. Coco makes an ‘effort to fly down’32 however his ‘clipped wings fail him’33. From a feminist’s perspective, the death of Coco may be seen as an allegory for the danger of male power in a patriarchal society, due to its symbolisation of Antoinette’s death who had her wings clipped when she was locked in the attic of Thornfield. The argument of Antoinette being entrapped by patriarchal society is furthered when Antoinette takes ‘refuge’34 in a matriarchal convent where she felt ‘bolder, happier, and free’35 but is removed by Mr Mason causing her fear as she knows she cannot thrive ‘outside’36. Antoinette is continually displayed as a passive character that will not shape her own fate. This is exampled the morning she found the ‘dead horse’37 displaying the attitude of denial (‘it may not be true’38). Yet it is this attitude that contributes to her lack of power around men. She is continually given the opportunity to walk away, for example -a psychological critic would observe that after her marriage had disintegrated with Rochester she turned to Sandi to for emotional stability. However when she is given the opportunity to be happy with another person, she declines. Even though she is ‘unhappy’39 she continues to be dictated to by patriarchal ideals.

Another significant factor in the journey of both protagonists is their experiences with Rochester. In part two of ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’ he tells the story through his perspective after taking the narrative voice away from Antoinette- this was after they had married which is symbolic for Antoinette’s loss of power due to patriarchy -which left a woman with no voice.  Rochester’s relationship to Antoinette is vastly different to his relationship with Jane as it is based upon money and lust. This is highlighted through the epistolary technique which is used to the reveal psychological truths about Rochester. This evident after Rochester’s arrival in Granbois when he takes ‘refuge’40 in Mr Mason’s old English study, writing a letter to his father. A psychological critic would detect the anger in the line ‘All is well and has gone according to your plans and wishes.’41 as his resentment stems from being controlled by his father. There is an intentional emphasis on ‘your’42 to stress marrying Antoinette was not what he wanted but an arrangement by his father and brother so as to provide for him without having to divide the family estate. Furthermore, a psychological critic would decode Rochester’s feelings of Antoinette through the tentative language he uses to describe Granbois- ‘I suppose’43 highlights Rochester doesn’t understand where he is neither does he try to. This is further shown through the repetition of the word ‘alien’44 to create an outsider effect.  Moreover, Rochester furthers Antoinette’s feelings of entrapment which have been consistent since childhood by calling her ‘Bertha’45. By doing this he is not only ‘denying her true self’46 but he is also placing the power of the relationship in his own hands, in this way he can deny Antoinette her identity and ensure she surrenders into his idea of what a woman is. This has the effect of descending her into madness, highlighting Rochester’s role in the oppression of Antoinette.

Jane’s journey ends in a classical Victorian format, with the novels structure ensuring all problems are resolved at the end-leaving the protagonist with a happy ending. This is shown in the last chapter which is entitled ‘Conclusion’47; this is symbolic as it implies Jane’s story has been completed due to her successful Victorian marriage which resulted in motherhood. The original reader would appreciate this ending when compared to a modern feminist as a successful marriage was the aim of every Victorian woman, due to its financial security, therefore Jane achieved the best outcome possible. Moreover, it is apparent to the reader that Jane is delighted in her family life as she addresses the reader directly-‘Reader, I married him’48. This is a motif Bronte uses to show Jane’s moments of heightened emotion. This adds to the sense that Jane has completed her journey and emphasises her happiness.

In contrast to Jane’s journey, is Antoinette’s death in the destruction of Thornfield. The fire of Thornfield was structurally foreshadowed in part three due to the frequent use of the colour ‘red’49, symbolising the fire that will destroy Thornfield. However the colour red also connotes Antoinette’s home- as it is a warm vibrant colour that represents Jamaica. Hence why Antoinette recalls her memory of Tia at ‘the pool at Coulibri’50, which ‘beckoned’51 her to return home, making the cyclical structure evident. A psychological reading would suggest that Antoinette’s final act of reaching out to Tia and ‘the sky so red’52 in her last moments shows a psychological regression. However, the line ‘Now at last I know why I was brought here and what I have to do’53 suggests a moment of clear rationality, displaying a different side to Antoinette then the continuously displayed passive character that always reacted to men. By actively setting fire to Thornfield and committing suicide, Antoinette is gaining the power that always evaded her by deciding her own fate. This is symbolic of Antoinette breaking free of the binds that were enforced upon her, by society, ever since she was a child.

In conclusion, Charlotte Bronte and Jean Rhys use lots of methods to display the significant difference in the journeys of their protagonists. The reason for the difference in their journey is based on ‘the difference in the way they accept their roles as women in a patriarchal society.’ Jane’s journey of an isolated child transforming into the perfect stereotypical Victorian woman is suited to the classical Victorian structure as the events are chronological and allow a resolution at the end due to all questions being answered. Whereas, Rhys displays Antoinette’s mental disintegration gradually- through the style of a modernist text, which is fragmented due to its lack of chronological order and use of different perspectives. This emphasises Antoinette’s lack of power due to society’s patriarchal structure which ensured women had no voice.
The difference in the narrative methods used by Charlotte Bronte and Jean Rhys, display the extensive difference in journey’s experienced by their protagonists.



Word Count: 1963























Bibliography

1 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
2 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
3 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
4 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
5 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
6 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
7 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
8 Page 6, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
9 Page 6, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
10 Page 6, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
11 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
12 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
13 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
14 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
15 Page 5, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
16 http://www.qub.ac.uk/schools/SchoolofEnglish/imperial/carib/sargasso.htm
17http://www.qub.ac.uk/schools/SchoolofEnglish/imperial/carib/sargasso.htm
18 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
19 Page 7, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
20 Page 7, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
21 Page 7, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
22 Page 7, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
23 Page 12, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
24 Page 12, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
25 Lady Geraldine’s Courtship, ‘The Degradation of Married Women in the Victorian Era’, http://loki.stockton.edu/~kinsellt/projects/courtship/storyReader$3.html
26 Page 28, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
27 Page 33, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
28 Page 33, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
29 Page 55, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
30 Page 55, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
31 Page 23, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
32 Page 23, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
33 Page 23, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
34 Page 31, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
35 Page 32, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
36 Page 34, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
37 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
38 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
39 Page 120, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
40 Page 45, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
41 Page 46, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
42 Page 46, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
43 Page 46, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
44 Page 55, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
45 Page 71, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
46 Richard Griffiths, ‘Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea- Other Voices’,  http://apsenglishlanglit.edublogs.org/files/2011/01/JE-and-WSS-Other-Voices-2atqgu1.doc
47 Page 397, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
48 Page 397, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
49 Page 120, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
50 Page 123, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
51 Page 123, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
52 Page 123, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
53 Page 124, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997






"Compare and contrast the ways Charlotte Bronte and Jean Rhys have used a range of narrative methods to explore the journey of their protagonists."

Both ‘Jane Eyre’, by Charlotte Bronte, and ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, by Jean Rhys, are written in the genre of bildungsroman, in which the reader follows the journey of their protagonists from childhood to adulthood. Charlotte Bronte structures her novel 'Jane Eyre' in a classical Victorian format as the story moves in a chronological linear time-frame which is narrated by a single character, this story explores an isolated child who develops and thrives in Victorian society through submission and inheritance. However, Jean Rhys uses a post-modernist style which uses multiple narrative voices and a non-chronological structure which appears fragmented, exposing Antoinette’s gradually disintegrating mind due to the effects of the patriarchal society which entraps her. Ultimately both texts use different narrative methods to display a vast difference in the journey’s experienced by their protagonists.

Both protagonists experience isolated childhoods, which influence the way in which they develop to adulthood. Jane is an alienated and lonely child at Gateshead which is caused by the rejection she receives by the Reed’s. Through the language device of pathetic fallacy, Bronte has reflected her ‘saddened’1 heart through the weather. The words used to describe the weather are harsh and blunt; the wind is ‘cold’2, the clouds ‘sombre’3 and the rain ‘penetrating’4 exposing Jane’s emotional feelings of confinement. Furthermore the pronouns ‘I’5 and ‘me’6 are used to highlight the emotional barriers between herself and the other characters. However, Jane’s detachment is not enough to stop her poor treatment, as she is continually bullied by Mrs Reed’s ‘darlings’7- especially by John Reed, who is determined to ‘punish’8 Jane for being a ‘dependent’9 calling her vicious names such as a ‘rat’10. Furthermore, a feminist critic would observe the injustice of Jane's treatment by the ‘Master’11 of the house as in the 19th Century, Victorian society was patriarchal-a structure which ensured women were submissive to men due to their lack of legal rights.

Similarly, the protagonist Antoinette experiences rejection and isolation. Jean Rhys used the background of the Post Emancipation Act which created an atmosphere of mistrust and violence in society. This symbolised through Antoinette’s garden that is as ‘large and beautiful as that garden in the bible’12 (The Garden of Eden) which becomes ‘wild’13 with ‘snaky looking’14 objects. The snake is a motif used throughout to symbolise evil and corruption. This is to show the racial tension which is first presented at the start of the book with the use of pronouns and battle jargon- ‘They say when trouble comes close ranks, and so the white people did.’15 Which shows how the creoles can be ‘accepted neither by the negro community nor by the representatives of the colonial centre.’16 Because of this, Antoinette is seen as ‘nothing’17 to either race. This ultimately made Antoinette feel threatened (due to her mother’s horse being ‘poisoned’18 –at the start of the story- by the angry ex-slaves) so she tries to seek feelings of safety and comfort within her mother, but is rejected by Annette who tells her daughter ‘oh let me alone’19. This is a significant moment in Antoinette’s life as she becomes ‘useless’20 to her mother. This ultimately fuels her desperation for emotional acceptance by Rochester to the point of self-destruction.

But both protagonists deal with their obstacles in different ways. Jane is undeterred by her lonely childhood she still has lessons to learn which will help her to overcome the obstacles she will encounter in the future. The first main lesson Jane must learn, is that her fiery ‘passion’21 must be tamed; this lesson is learnt in the ‘red room’22 which she is entrapped within by Mrs Reed, and would only be ‘liberated’23 on the condition of ‘perfect submission and stillness’24. A feminist critic would understand the vital lesson of submission. This was a lesson every Victorian woman had to learn if they wanted to be successful, as they had no rights in a marriage. 18th Century English jurist William Blackstone described a woman’s legal status within marriage as ‘in law a husband and wife are one person, and the husband is that person’25. In addition, a post-colonial critic would observe the description given to Mrs Reed- ‘skin was dark’26- which gives her a distinct un-English quality. The original readership would understand that this was only reserved for villainous characters. This reflects the attitude of mistrust towards foreigners in a 19th Century England that had little experience of other cultures. Additionally, the strength of Jane’s character is continually tested through various experiences Jane encounters, for example whilst at Lowood she challenges the hypocrisy of organised religion which through Bronte’s structural use of journalism, for example stating it was ’five o’clock’27 on the ‘19th of January’28. With this, in addition to the genre of ‘The Conditions of England’, it presents the immoral events as fact. An example of this is when Mr Brocklehurst, who claimed he was strict Anglican, removed the donated money, intended for the orphaned children, to pay for his family who ‘were splendidly attired in velvet, silk and furs’29. The incongruity is taken further when Brocklehurst insists on cutting the curls off one of the orphaned girls to then have his wife and children parade around the institution with a ‘false front of French curls’30.

Alternatively, unlike Jane, Antoinette is unable to overcome her problems in childhood which is evident when she gradually dismantles which is shown through the texts structure as it becomes more frequent in its fragmentation. Rhys shows Antoinette’s inability to act on the issues which ultimately entrap her. This is foreshadowed through Annette’s parrot Coco who had his wings ‘clipped’31 by Mr Mason before Coulibri was set aflame by the ex-slaves. Coco makes an ‘effort to fly down’32 however his ‘clipped wings fail him’33. From a feminist’s perspective, the death of Coco may be seen as an allegory for the danger of male power in a patriarchal society, due to its symbolisation of Antoinette’s death who had her wings clipped when she was locked in the attic of Thornfield. The argument of Antoinette being entrapped by patriarchal society is furthered when Antoinette takes ‘refuge’34 in a matriarchal convent where she felt ‘bolder, happier, and free’35 but is removed by Mr Mason causing her fear as she knows she cannot thrive ‘outside’36. Antoinette is continually displayed as a passive character that will not shape her own fate. This is exampled the morning she found the ‘dead horse’37 displaying the attitude of denial (‘it may not be true’38). Yet it is this attitude that contributes to her lack of power around men. She is continually given the opportunity to walk away, for example -a psychological critic would observe that after her marriage had disintegrated with Rochester she turned to Sandi to for emotional stability. However when she is given the opportunity to be happy with another person, she declines. Even though she is ‘unhappy’39 she continues to be dictated to by patriarchal ideals.

Another significant factor in the journey of both protagonists is their experiences with Rochester. In part two of ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’ he tells the story through his perspective after taking the narrative voice away from Antoinette- this was after they had married which is symbolic for Antoinette’s loss of power due to patriarchy -which left a woman with no voice.  Rochester’s relationship to Antoinette is vastly different to his relationship with Jane as it is based upon money and lust. This is highlighted through the epistolary technique which is used to the reveal psychological truths about Rochester. This evident after Rochester’s arrival in Granbois when he takes ‘refuge’40 in Mr Mason’s old English study, writing a letter to his father. A psychological critic would detect the anger in the line ‘All is well and has gone according to your plans and wishes.’41 as his resentment stems from being controlled by his father. There is an intentional emphasis on ‘your’42 to stress marrying Antoinette was not what he wanted but an arrangement by his father and brother so as to provide for him without having to divide the family estate. Furthermore, a psychological critic would decode Rochester’s feelings of Antoinette through the tentative language he uses to describe Granbois- ‘I suppose’43 highlights Rochester doesn’t understand where he is neither does he try to. This is further shown through the repetition of the word ‘alien’44 to create an outsider effect.  Moreover, Rochester furthers Antoinette’s feelings of entrapment which have been consistent since childhood by calling her ‘Bertha’45. By doing this he is not only ‘denying her true self’46 but he is also placing the power of the relationship in his own hands, in this way he can deny Antoinette her identity and ensure she surrenders into his idea of what a woman is. This has the effect of descending her into madness, highlighting Rochester’s role in the oppression of Antoinette.

Jane’s journey ends in a classical Victorian format, with the novels structure ensuring all problems are resolved at the end-leaving the protagonist with a happy ending. This is shown in the last chapter which is entitled ‘Conclusion’47; this is symbolic as it implies Jane’s story has been completed due to her successful Victorian marriage which resulted in motherhood. The original reader would appreciate this ending when compared to a modern feminist as a successful marriage was the aim of every Victorian woman, due to its financial security, therefore Jane achieved the best outcome possible. Moreover, it is apparent to the reader that Jane is delighted in her family life as she addresses the reader directly-‘Reader, I married him’48. This is a motif Bronte uses to show Jane’s moments of heightened emotion. This adds to the sense that Jane has completed her journey and emphasises her happiness.

In contrast to Jane’s journey, is Antoinette’s death in the destruction of Thornfield. The fire of Thornfield was structurally foreshadowed in part three due to the frequent use of the colour ‘red’49, symbolising the fire that will destroy Thornfield. However the colour red also connotes Antoinette’s home- as it is a warm vibrant colour that represents Jamaica. Hence why Antoinette recalls her memory of Tia at ‘the pool at Coulibri’50, which ‘beckoned’51 her to return home, making the cyclical structure evident. A psychological reading would suggest that Antoinette’s final act of reaching out to Tia and ‘the sky so red’52 in her last moments shows a psychological regression. However, the line ‘Now at last I know why I was brought here and what I have to do’53 suggests a moment of clear rationality, displaying a different side to Antoinette then the continuously displayed passive character that always reacted to men. By actively setting fire to Thornfield and committing suicide, Antoinette is gaining the power that always evaded her by deciding her own fate. This is symbolic of Antoinette breaking free of the binds that were enforced upon her, by society, ever since she was a child.

In conclusion, Charlotte Bronte and Jean Rhys use lots of methods to display the significant difference in the journeys of their protagonists. The reason for the difference in their journey is based on ‘the difference in the way they accept their roles as women in a patriarchal society.’ Jane’s journey of an isolated child transforming into the perfect stereotypical Victorian woman is suited to the classical Victorian structure as the events are chronological and allow a resolution at the end due to all questions being answered. Whereas, Rhys displays Antoinette’s mental disintegration gradually- through the style of a modernist text, which is fragmented due to its lack of chronological order and use of different perspectives. This emphasises Antoinette’s lack of power due to society’s patriarchal structure which ensured women had no voice.
The difference in the narrative methods used by Charlotte Bronte and Jean Rhys, display the extensive difference in journey’s experienced by their protagonists.




Word Count: 1963

Bibliography

1 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
2 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
3 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
4 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
5 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
6 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
7 Page 3, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
8 Page 6, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
9 Page 6, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
10 Page 6, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
11 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
12 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
13 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
14 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
15 Page 5, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
18 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
19 Page 7, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
20 Page 7, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
21 Page 7, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
22 Page 7, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
23 Page 12, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
24 Page 12, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
25 Lady Geraldine’s Courtship, ‘The Degradation of Married Women in the Victorian Era’, http://loki.stockton.edu/~kinsellt/projects/courtship/storyReader$3.html
26 Page 28, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
27 Page 33, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
28 Page 33, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
29 Page 55, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
30 Page 55, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
31 Page 23, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
32 Page 23, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
33 Page 23, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
34 Page 31, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
35 Page 32, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
36 Page 34, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
37 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
38 Page 6, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
39 Page 120, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
40 Page 45, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
41 Page 46, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
42 Page 46, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
43 Page 46, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
44 Page 55, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
45 Page 71, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
46 Richard Griffiths, ‘Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea- Other Voices’,  http://apsenglishlanglit.edublogs.org/files/2011/01/JE-and-WSS-Other-Voices-2atqgu1.doc
47 Page 397, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
48 Page 397, ‘Jane Eyre’, Charlotte Bronte, Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992
49 Page 120, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
50 Page 123, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
51 Page 123, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
52 Page 123, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997
53 Page 124, ‘Wide Sargasso Sea’, Jean Rhys, Penguin, 1997

To what extent is gender stereotypes reinforced or challenged in your chosen story from Carter’s ‘The Bloody Chamber’.

Angela Carter deconstructs and transforms the core elements of traditional tales and motifs. She does this by dismantling the long established depictions of women within the fairy tale genre (which are perceived to be ‘frail’ and ‘helpless’). By re-telling the stories of well-known fairy tales in her collection, she exposes ‘societal ideals within the original tales which were used to perpetuate Christian patriarchal concepts as a means of maintaining the gender hierarchy’1- this is an issue which was previously identified by Bettelheim. However, Carter re-shapes these tales by inverting their traditional narrative structure and draws them out of their conventional fairy tale format, separating them from conventional child stories or folk tale, and into a dark, erotic exposure or gender and sexuality. This is made clear through her innovative use of the Gothic, which allows Carter to marginalise the norm and occupy a more central cultural place- this method is used to transgress the limits of what is commonly accepted of a gender. The definition of gender stereotypes is ‘[not] how females (and males) really are, but the way that a given culture or sub-culture sees them, how they are culturally constructed.’2 this definition means that gender identity is determined by a patriarchal society. Carter however aims to deconstruct the traditional structures in order to direct the reader’s attention to contemporary problems, mostly related to her feminist viewpoint.
Gender stereotypes are challenged in The Bloody Chamber (TBC) by the Mother figure, who inverts the typical female Gothic stock character. Originally in the tale of Blue Beard (BB) the story TBC is based upon, it is the brother who saves the protagonist as in traditional Gothic structures, the mother would be presented as a passive figure, but Carter alternatively deconstructs this profile and presents the reader with a ‘complex’3 and ‘forceful’4 feminist vision of an ‘avenging angel’5. This gives her the ability to strip the Marquis of his masculine superiority and make him ‘impotent at last’6. To overcome the Marquis the Mother uses her husbands ‘service revolver’7 to kill him ‘without a moment’s hesitation’8- Carter said she did this to ‘decolonis[e]… our habits of thought’9.  One interpretation of this ending can be seen as Carter showing a synonymous relationship between man and woman, as one cannot overcome an obstacle without the other, or Carter could be presenting the idea that women have the potential to surpass the stereotypical limitations through opportunities that transgress the norm, as once the ‘[Marquis] is vanquished by the mother and daughter [the] victimisation of women is overturned’10. This remodels the outcome of the stereotypical story-as female autonomy becomes the happy ending rather than female subservience to males. On the other hand, another translation may be Carter displaying female emancipation which is only possible through the symbol of male power- the ‘service revolver’11 (used to kill the Marquis) is symbolic of a phallus- this is because in the contextual time period the tale is set, women believed they needed male power to overcome obstacles. However in later tales of Carter’s collection, such as The Erl King (TEK) or The Lady of the House of Love (TLOTHOL), the heroines use their own female power to be liberated from male subservience. This is symbolic as the first story in the collection (TBC) shows females depending on the power of males but the last tale in the collection Wolf Alice (WA), it shows an equilibrium of power between both sexes- therefore Carter’s collection of tales significantly tracks feminism through the ages.
However, gender stereotypes are reinforced in TBC through Carter’s use of Gothic conventions such as: characters, settings and plot developments. An example of Carter’s Gothic conventions can be identified in the heroine, as she embodies the two stereotypical versions of gothic women- the innocent virgin and the seductress. For instance a key moment when the virginal heroine displays characteristics of naivety and innocence, commonly associated with women, is when the heroine is at the opera performance of ‘Tristan’12- used as a device to foreshadow the love triangle which occurs later in the tale. It is there, as she catches herself in the mirror, she sees herself through the eyes of the Marquis who watched her with the ‘assessing eye of a connoisseur’13, a gaze which implies his carnal desire to consume and feed off of her purity. She sees the ‘sinuous shift of white muslin tied with a silk string under the breasts…[,] his wedding gift…a choker of rubies… clasped around [her] throat…[and] sensed in [her]self a potentiality for corruption.’14 This image further foreshadows the Marquis’ wish to decapitate the heroine as the choker previously belonged to his Grandmother who wore it to show she had ‘escaped the guillotine’15 at the time of the French Revolution. Nonetheless, it is not until after he had corrupted her chastity that she came to realise it was her ‘innocence that captivated him’16, Schanoes believed this was Carter ‘highlighting the social construction of female masochism and sexual passivity’17, as the Marquis’ attraction to innocence and naivety could be a reflection of mankind as a collective. This attitude was common in previous times (such as the Victorian era) as women were brought up to be innocent and sexually ignorant- as it could impede on their families honour. Not only does the  predatory Marquis represent the male sex as a collective, but the heroine is representative of the female collection, this can be seen after the heroines lost her ‘virginity’18 in the Marquis’ bedroom she believes that at that moment there are ‘a dozen husbands impal[ing] a dozen brides’19. This insinuates a history of women who have been victims of violent abuse or unhappy marriages which she identifies herself a part of, it is E. B. Manley who argues that 'the mirror scenes establish the protagonist as oscillating between girlhood and womanhood, between a patriarchal view and her own definition of herself'20. Likewise in WA, mirrors play a vital role as it enlightens the protagonist to her own power, once she realises her reflection is her shadow her perspective shifts from animal objectivity to human subjectivity, changing the female stereotype. This may be Carter signifying a universal need to alter the way society understands female sexuality and identity.
Alternatively, the heroine embodies the seductress. After recognising her innocent image was one that had been produced through the social conditioning of a phallocentric culture (which desired the domination over the female object) it helped her to gain female independence-along with her increased knowledge of sexuality and violence, partly due to her experience of the bloody chamber. Carter uses the symbol of bloody chamber within all her tales, as it is through this that her protagonists gain enlightenment which allows them to metamorphosis and escape the binds of their sexual oppression. The heroine almost succeeds in seducing her husband, by using his male desire of innocence against him, ‘If he had come to me in bed, I would have strangled him’21, through the reality of her death after seeing his past wives perversely ‘strung up’22, ‘disembodied’23 and ‘denuded of flesh’24 -which was created through female submission- she is no longer naive. This may be Carter making a feminist statement through her exploration of gender and female sexuality. Carter may have been influenced by the different contested positions feminism had debated such as: pornography, sexuality, violence and the representation of women. These issues intensified in the late 1970’s and 80’s, which may have significantly influenced Carter’s work. Carter uses issues such as pornography to disprove feminist ideas that they reflect ‘a sort of distilled essence of the entrenched binaries of patriarchal gender relations, the conflict revolved around the extent to which pornographic representations could be appropriated’25 Carter instead suggests an alternative that can empower women. This is seen in her other tales such as In the Company of Wolves (ITCOW) where the protagonist refuses to be a victim and when presented with the inevitable rape conforms to her own ideals instead of the conventional.
The concept of gender stereotype is constructed, inverted and transformed in TBC through Carter’s use of deconstruction to the core elements in traditional tales. This may be to force the reader to radically question their beliefs surrounding cultural construction and thus gender stereotype and gender sexuality. This is reinforced through the use of Gothic stock characters, which display the cultural stereotype in which she deconstructs and transforms the characters to present the reader with a different aspect to women in the fairy tale genre and sexuality to encourage change. By deconstructing the fairy tale form, Carter highlights the societal ideals (such as patriarchy) within the original tales, and reveals its corrupt purpose-which is to maintain the gender hierarchy which ensures women remain submissive to a phallocentric culture. In particular she condemns the female characteristic of passivity and nativity. She shows this through the bloody chamber which displays a fatal consequence to previous submissive female characters. This is symbolic of an endless cycle which is caused by a patriarchal society which warrants the objectification and possession of women to a male dominance.

Word Count :1507

Bibliography
1 http://hilo.hawaii.edu/academics/hohonu/documents/Vol07x07HappilyEverAfter.pdf
2  The Critical Anthology Article 4
3 Kari E. Lokke ‘Bluebeard and The Bloody Chamber: The Grotesque of Self-Parody and Self-Assertio’
4 Kari E. Lokke ‘Bluebeard and The Bloody Chamber: The Grotesque of Self-Parody and Self-Assertio’
5 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 39
6 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page
7 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 40
8Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 41
10 Old Wine in New Bottles (the analysis of cultural constructions of femininity in A.Carter’s “The Bloody Chamber”, Page 123, file:///C:/Users/Elizabeth/Downloads/Mik_2012_15_1_23%20(1).pdf
11 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 40
12 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 3
13 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 6
14 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 6
15 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 6
16 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 16

17 Professor Veronica L Schanoes, Fairy Tales, Myth, and Psychoanalytic Theory: Feminism and Retelling the Tale, https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wlqUBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA89&lpg=PA89&dq=%E2%80%98highlighting+the+social+construction+of+female+masochism+and+sexual+passivity%E2%80%99&source=bl&ots=Df_XWggpUC&sig=JwXubfJT_VnLuBYhuNUUEYXvm-s&hl=en&sa=X&ei=b7cqVaGMEYfXapelgeAM&ved=0CCYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%E2%80%98highlighting%20the%20social%20construction%20of%20female%20masochism%20and%20sexual%20passivity%E2%80%99&f=false

18 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 14
19 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 14
21 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 34
22 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 27
23 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 27
24 Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2012, Page 27

Wednesday 10 June 2015

Consider the view that literature within the Gothic genre is always shocking.

Gothic literature has always been characterised as having the effect of being shocking to its readers. It is a useful tool to have the effect of making the readers think on the deeper message, usually a hidden and symbolic message, about societies treatment of class, gender and ideologies. If the Gothic wasn't shocking, the message may not be as powerful or even noticed. For example, the Marquis' 'bloody chamber' filled with his dead wives which are ornamented around the room, has connotations of the implications of patriarchy and its effect of how women were/are treated. This can also be seen as an extreme and melodramatic way to represent gender inequality, thus pointing out one of the main problems of the Gothic. If it tries to be too shocking or scary, it can fall into the genre of melodramatic. However, for Gothic plays such as 'Dr Faustus', it is the melodramatic of the supernatural which is used to help create a message of humour against Catholicism, for example the fooling of the Pope. It may have been staged with actors dressed in white sheets-clearly portraying ghosts- haunting the Pope in an over-exaggerated fashion, to which he gives a melodramatic reaction believing it is those he conned out of indulgences who have returned from purgatory to reek revenge. However, in Emily Bronte's novel 'Wuthering Heights' the shocking permeates the plot, mainly through the actions of Cathy 1 and Heathcliff due to their obsessive and destructive love, a common stricking event of the novel is the necrophillia of Cathy 1 by Heathcliff who has Sexton dig up her grave. He tells Nelly, who thus in turn tells Lockwood who tells the reader, 'I'll have her in my arms again'. This is a transgression of the moral boundaries and not only shocked the original readership but still shocks modern day readers, showing that the Gothic still has a powerful and shocking effect that is timeless.

The relationship between Cathy 1 and Heathcliff can almost be viewed as overbearing for the reader. Their love is so extreme that it defies the hegemonic ideologies of 19th Century society and 21st Century society. Their relationship is corruptive as they often transgress moral boundaries for one another that they can be described as mentally diseased characters. An example of this is when Heathcliff told Sexton to remove the earth from Cathy 1's grave so he could look upon her in again, regardess of her dead state. Before he told Nelly on how he planned to hold her again, he said his instructions in which he parted to Sexton, that when he dies he must be placed inbetween Cathy 1 and Edgar, so when all their bodies 'melt'  Edgar will never know 'which is which', creating gruesome and Gothic imagery for the reader that is represented of the 'fallen world' that the moors represents (Ann B Tracy). This is a significant moment, which is just one of the many moments when Heathcliff defies the hegemonic ideologies of society. By placing himself between Edgar and Cathy 1, he is disrupting the bond of marriage, the cornerstone of Victorian society, thus shocking the original readership. Furthermore, Heathcliff's placement inbetween Cathy 1 and Edgar is a tool used to show the conflict between men over Cathy 1. Cathy 1 has divided feelings for both men, her love is contrasting and reflecting on the personality of both men, for Edgar is like the 'foliage', she understands that her love for Edgar will change 'with the seasons' yet it shows it is natural and promotes human flourishing. Whilst Heathcliff is like the 'rock' her love for him is 'eternal' yet it is not pretty like the foliage, showing her love for Heathcliff is hard and will always withstand any conflicts or barriers placed inbetween them (such as social class or death). Critics have picked up on moments such as Cathy 1 using nature to explain her feelings, as the use of romantic language with the nature of the Yorkshire moors shows biographical influences, just as the Heathcliff's digging up of Cathy 1's body is reflective of the grave yard in front of the Parsonage, it was often (due to diseases such as consumption which raged havoc in 19th Century Britain) that bodies were re-dug up due to the extreme amount of deaths in the village, thus the smell of rotting corpses surrounded the Bronte house. This may be a reason for why Heathcliff talks of his immoral deeds in such a casual tone, as it was a normality for Bronte. Or because he is the dark 'villain'- a Gothic byronic hero.

Shocking elements in the play 'Dr Faustus' evolve around the conflicting ideas of Catholicism and Protestanism. Christopher Marlowe uses this conflict to present these issues to the audience, for example predestination. Whilst Catholicism believed that only certain people could recieve God's grace and go to Heaven whilst the rest were damned, verses the Protestant view that anyone and everyone who has lead a moral life can go to heaven- which created mass confusion as people didn't know which concept they should follow. Marlowe plays on this, which can be seen through Faustus who manipulates these ideas in order to sin and have the power of 'necromancy'. He does by selling his 'soul' to the devil- a shocking and blasphemous concept- and will not repent for his sin, this is due to his belief that 'the reward of sin is death', thus convincing himself that he is already damned to an eternity of torture hence he tries to have fun with his new 'power' within the 24 years he has left to live. However critics have focused on Marlowe's structure which form 4 parts: doubt, persuation, resolve and gain. For example his doubt when he asks himself what the devil would want with his soul yet the enticing gain of 'riches' beyond his imagination. However although Faustus aspires for this accomplishment and the power of necromancy too, he never actually achieves it. It is only Mephastophilies who has the power to bring back 'spirits' however these are not the actual spirits, they are sucubine, for example Helen of Troy, who's 'lips sucks forth [Faustus'] soul'. The fact that Mephastophilies can summon spirits from the dead is another shocking aspect to the play, as it goes against (both) religious beliefs that someone else has the power to bring back what God had sent away, as he is an all-powerful being. This could be interpreted as Marlowe macking a mockery on all of religion, a view some critics of the play believe is likely, however it is also believed that Marlowe was paid by the state to write a play against Catholicism. However Marlowe can be seen as a reckless man, due to his bar fights which later resulted in his death, thus he may have placed atheist ideas in the play to rebel against the state itself.

Angela Carter's collection of tales has used issues such as gender stereotype and gender inquality which have been reinforced, inverted and transformed in an attempt to 'decolonise our habits of thought'. Critics have been excitied as well as shocked by the post-modern Gothic Feminist book- as she takes them out of their 'set shapes' out of 'children's stories and folk art' and 'into the world of change'. Her first tale, is the Bloody Chamber, a re-shaped story of the tale Bluebeard by Charles Perrault. The title 'The Bloody Chamber' is viewed as representative of a torture chamber or a womans vagina, the fact that two completely different concepts come from the same title gives a symbolic meaning, as Carter shows they are both one in the same. Carter highlights that a torture chamber is linked to a womans vagina through the chamber where the Marquis' wives are 'strung up', 'denuded of flesh' and 'enbalmed' on a bed of 'silk', which is gruesome and shocking imagery for the reader. It has been interpreted that the torture chamber is Carter's main feminist message, as it is due to patriarchy that women have allowed themselves to be submissive to male autonomy, thus showing societies strucutre in the past has had negative consequences.Yet Carter's tales when viewed as one whole tale highlights the feminist journey women have had to take to gain their own power through sexual liberation-as is displayed by the end tale when the girl liberates herself from societial influence. The most shocking aspect of the tale can be seen when it is the mother who rescues the female protagonist, stereotypically in fairy tales, the man save the damself in distress. Charles Perrault used the traditional form of the fairy tale plot where a man helped the woman 'forget her time with Bluebeard'. Yet, as the critic Makinen said, Carter ironically uses Perraults patriarchal tales against him. By the mother, who in Gothic literature is either absent or dead, actively rescue the damsel in distress, Carter is changing the hegemonic ideologies and thus showing the start point of women taking power into their own hands. However it is important to note, the mother could only save the daughter with the use of her husbands 'service revolver', which means at this point in the story a woman has to still rely on male autonomy, but this is changed by the time of the story of The Erl King, when the female protagonist strangles the Erl King with his own hair, making a mans possession his iwn weakness. Carter highlights the importance of gender equality in the most shocking and daring way, and it is only possible to see ths message if the reader is willing to 'place themselves out of a phallocentric culture'.

In conclusion, the Gothic genre is shocking as it's its purpose to be. Through the use of the readers shock, it draws them in, making them interested in the plot. And by doing this, it enables the writer to suggest new ideals which rebel against societies ideals. Thus the Gothic marginalises the readers norms and brings central the ideas such as necrophillia and gender equality which society tries to marginalise. Thus the effect of the shocking in the Gothic is one of the most important elements of the genre itself.