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IMAGES OF WOMEN'S POWER
IN CONTEMPORARY CANADIAN FICTION
BY WOMEN
Carol L. Beran
In 1972, Margaret Atwood's book Survival identified the victim as the typical Canadian
character. Although "Miss Atwood's delightful doomsday book" (Gutteridge 39) has been
labeled "a distorted view of our writing" (Fulford 30), "a vision that cannot be accepted in literal
totality" (Woodcock 160), although critics have noted that "the themes Atwood finds to
dominate the literature - victimization and survival - are two main themes of her own work, and
have been in no way as important to other Canadian writers" (Davey 34), and although feminist
criticism has moved away from emphasis on victimization, the power and influence of Survival
should not be underestimated. Gutteridge noted in 1973 that its best-seller status and the critical
attention it was being accorded made it "safe, and proper, to conclude that its underlying
assumptions about the nature of Canadian society and literature are being taken seriously" (39),
Fulford concluded that ". . . she has written a book that is at once searching and challenging, a
book that forces the reader to think not only about the books of his country but about the
environment that produced those books" (30), and Woodcock acknowledged that ". . . Atwood
has indeed isolated a familiar Canadian syndrome" (160). Scott Symons's recent attack on
"Atwood-as-Icon" notes that Survival made Atwood famous "and in effect provided us with a
handbook on how to better our lot" (36). Whether or not the whole Atwood agenda is as
perverse as Symons goes on to suggest, Survival did heighten consciousness of a non-trivial
facet of much Canadian literature. Since Survival's publication in 1972, perhaps in reaction to
Atwood's theory and no doubt in reaction to the feminist movement in general, an enhanced
awareness of victimization and power has been reflected by many Canadian women writers
of fiction who have presented complex images of women as powerful. Among these images are:
1) traditional images of women's power such as costume and hairstyles, witchcraft, and children;
2) traditional images of men's power ascribed to women, including guns, knives, success in
traditionally male occupations, sexual freedom, and masculine vocabulary; 3) fresh images of
women's power including androgyny, freedom of choice, feeling and evoking strong emotions,
and voicing one's own vision of the world, often in art.
To examine all such images would require a book at least as long as Survival, which, no
matter how many literary works it considered, would still be open to the criticisms of omissions
of the sort that were levelled at Survival. I have chosen here instead to consider images of
power in the fiction of three important Canadian feminist writers, examining more than one
work by each author to gain a clear understanding of what these three writers perceive about
victims and power. Aritha Van Herk's novels Judith and The Tent Peg provide a definitive look
at images of power as seen by a militant feminist in the late seventies and early eighties. Alice
Munro's stories "The Beggar Maid" and "Simon's Luck" are contemporaneous with Judith, yet
reveal a more understated feminist concept of women's power. Munro's "Lichen" appears in a
collection published between the two novels by Margaret Atwood - The Handmaid's Tale and
Cat's Eye - that are discussed in the final section of this paper. The sense of the cause of
victimization in "Lichen" is less societal than that in Atwood's fiction, more inherent in the
natural human condition, while its images of feminine power in creativity parallel images in these
two novels by Atwood. By looking at these four novels and three short stories, we can begin to
get a sense of how three of the definers of the collective consciousness perceive the progress -
or lack of progress - away from victimization.
Aritha Van Herk's novels Judith (1978) and The Tent Peg (1981) present women who
achieve power by adopting traditional symbols of men's power and then combining these with
traditional symbols of women's power to create new images of power for women.
Judith draws on images from The Odyssey and The Apocrypha to depict a woman who is
more capable than the men around her and yet is highly desirable sexually. Van Herk's Judith
has given up her secretarial job, sexy wardrobe, and fashionable hairstyles
in order to fulfill her dead father's dream of running a pig farm. Judith does a man's job better
than a man can do it when, dressed in "barn clothes" (181), frustrated that Jim's technique for
castrating her piglets is "awkward and the cut was not clean and deep but a swipe at the surface
nerves" (174), and upset at the "clumsy sawing cut that drew a shrill scream from the bottom of
the piglet's throat" (174), she exchanges roles with him:
She reached out her hand, now sure and fearless, so perfectly knowing. "Give
me that thing and you hold this pig down." ... And she slipped them [the piglet's
testicles] out of him so easily, so swiftly presiding over his emasculation like the
savage witch of pragmatism that she was. (175)
Ironically, at the moment that Judith most clearly proves her ability to function better than a
man in a traditional male role, Van Herk evokes the traditional sinister image of female power:
the witch. The narrator, in one of the rare figurative statements in the novel, has already
prepared us for this image by identifying the witch: "Not even Circe's turning men into swine
could equal it [castration]" (173), and later emphasizes the image of Judith as castrating witch
by referring to the piglets as "Circe's humans" (179). In The Odyssey the image of Circe is
double; she uses her power to transform Odysseus's men: "For now to all appearance they were
swine: they had pigs' heads and bristles and they grunted like pigs; but their minds were as
human as they had been before the change" (162). The god Hermes warns Odysseus that he
must bed Circe if he wishes to free his men, but warns him, "'when she has you stripped she may
rob you of your courage and your manhood'" (163). However, after Odysseus succeeds in
gaining the witch's favor, she not only releases his men but also provides good advice to aid
Odysseus in his next two adventures.
Van Herk's use of the Circe image for Judith evokes both aspects of the image. Taking the
knife, a traditional symbol of male power, from Jim and succeeding where he is inadequate, her
power threatens Jim's masculinity:
Jim held them silently, sweating, his eyes averted from hers in some other icy cast
of fear. She could almost have asked him to lie down on that bale, had she done
it with the same coolness and finesse that she tackled them, she who had never
before held that blade in her hand.... (176)
What threatens Jim liberates Judith. As she castrates the piglets, she comes to terms first with
her city lover and the false image of femininity she had adopted to please him:
Perhaps it was atonement for the acts of barbarity she had committed on herself
for him: plucking her sleek eyebrows, rolling her straight hair into curls, thrusting
golden posts through the holes in her ears. Did all that and then resented his
acceptance of it as his due, his casual, "You look lovely tonight, Judith." (175)
She also comes to terms with her need to please her father:
It mattered little whether he was alive or dead, she had to show him that she
would hold herself for him, her father.
And now she had seen the core, the axis always unexplained and
mysterious, more than a fusion of beginning and end, but the stuff that days and
weeks and months are made of, the continual hard, resistant core. (178)
Having proven herself in the man's world, having rejected the false images of womanhood
received from her city lover and her father, having looked into the mystery of life itself by
cutting open the piglets' scrotums, Judith turns into the beautiful goddess Circe who can draw
her Odysseus to her bed. She showers and dresses in her most feminine clothing; Jim returns
without explanation, and she becomes utterly feminine: she cries. Their sexual encounter only
takes place, however, after she has stated her equality by rejecting the typically feminine form of
nicknaming by adding "y" to a shortened version of the first name, an ending which linguists
have noted often occurs in baby talk (Frank and Anshen 22):
"Judy, shhh, listen, little girl, don't be so afraid all the time, you're safe now, my
little Judy, shhh."
... "I'm not little. I'm twenty-three years old. And if you dare to call me
Judy, you'll pay." (184)
Van Herk tells us that "There was something about denying her childishness that made it [sex]
better than it had ever been" (184). Interestingly, however, the narrator precedes this statement
with a curiously casual one: "And oh yes, it was very good" (184). Catching the man is not the
goal of a woman's life; "and oh yes" indicates this is simply one more of Judith's successes in her
new role. In this novel, then, women's power resides in succeeding at masculine occupations,
insisting on equality, claiming sexual freedom,
and growing up. It also implies acceptance of herself as a woman; she is able to put on her frilly
clothes without becoming an artificial being constructed to please a man, able to cry without
becoming a child again, able to assert her own wants even when dressed as a woman and crying.
The novel does not end as so many women's novels do, with the heroine getting her man.
The sexual encounter between Jim and Judith is followed by a sexual encounter between two
pigs during which Judith and Jim's mother, Mina, agree the male role in the life process is
minimally significant: "'that's all he gets to do. Only limited usefulness'" (186). The sow seems
to agree:
His necessity dispensed with, she wanted no more of him. At that the two
women clapped again.
"You tell him, Marie Antoinette," cried Mina. "You tell him." And
together they laughed, those insane women, laughed at everything they could and
as hard as they could as they danced about in the melting snow. (187)
The novel ends with Judith "crying bitter and unrestrainedly" (190) over an unread letter from
her lover in the city, then being soothed by the sounds of the pigs, and ultimately making her
choice:
"Pigs," she said. "Pigs." And she opened herself for them, stretched herself wide
and unending, her arms out, her head tall, her legs long.
"Pigs," she said, "you win." (190)
The image we are left with, then, is not of Judith welcoming either of her lovers (although Van
Herk's word choices evoke a sexual image), but embracing, by choice, her vocation as pig
farmer. The real power is not in a knife, alluring clothing, or sex, but in the ability to choose,
recognizing what that choice necessarily precludes, and yet embracing the choice totally.
Judith's name signals the connection with the story of Judith and Holophernes in The
Apocrypha. The ancient heroine, a widow running a large estate, chastises the Israelite men for
being ready to surrender the town and announces, "'I am going to do a deed which will be
remembered among our people for all generations'" (Judith 8:32). After fasting and prayer, she
transforms herself: "She put on sandals and anklets, bracelets and rings, her ear-rings and all her
ornaments, and made herself very attractive, so as to catch the eye of any man who might see
her (10:4). Using a
combination of cunning wisdom and her physical beauty, she arouses the interest of the enemy
general until he "shook with passion" (12:16), but she comes to his tent when he is "dead drunk"
(13:2) and cuts off his head with his sword. Returning home, she displays the head and
announces, "'Though my face lured him to destruction, he committed no sin with me, and my
honour is unblemished'" (13:16). Seeing the head on the battlements panics the enemy forces,
and so the town is preserved. Judith continues to live on her estate, and though she has many
suitors, she remains unmarried. Van Herk transforms the widow into a woman who has left a
lover, the estate into a pig farm, the beheading into castrating piglets, and the sackcloth into
grubby work clothes, updating the ancient story to fit a modern context while retaining its
archetypal structure. Her ability to succeed when men fail without losing her sexual desirability
and her ability to use her sexuality without losing her honor or becoming dependent on a male
make Van Herk's Judith, like her ancient prototype, a strong image of female power. The strong
parallels heighten our sense of the significance of the modern Judith's actions; she too sets an
example that can bring deliverance to her society.
In The Tent Peg, Van Herk restates the images of feminine power announced in Judith.
Like Judith, the heroine of The TentPeg takes a man's job. She becomes a cook (ambiguously,
a job with a woman's nurturing function) on a mining expedition in the Yukon, successfully
disguises herself as a man, and continues to wear men's clothes and a masculine hairstyle even
after admitting she is female. She goes by the name J.L. Using initials as a nickname is typically
masculine. The name also reflects a biblical allusion, as she explains:
"I was really named after a person in the Bible. J, A, dash, E, L. People used to
string it together so it sounded like 'Jail.' I didn't like that, so I decided I would
go by my initials, J.L." (14)
Like the apocryphal Judith, the biblical Jael is a woman who uses both the feminine and
masculine aspects of her nature: she entices the enemy general, Sisera, into her tent, nurtures
him with milk and a blanket, and then kills him with a tent peg as he sleeps (Judges chapter 4).
Van Herk's J.L. follows the pattern of her predecessor in spirit if not in fact. In the
climactic scene of the novel, one of the men in the camp is about to rape her in her tent, but she
prevents the rape by taking his gun - a symbol of masculine power - from him before her male
rescuers arrive on the scene:
... he fumbles at his pants. In a wild moment of lucidity I almost laugh at his
ineptness. He's kneeling over me and he raises himself to get at his zipper just
enough for me to bring my knees up and kick full force against his groin. He
yells but I don't give him a chance to recover. I knee him again and again, all the
while fighting for that Magnum, trying to pry it loose from his raw-boned hands.
And then he falls and I've got it, I'm standing over him with a loaded gun.
He tries to get up, lunges for me again, but I wave the gun at him.
"You wouldn't dare," he grunts. "Drop that gun."
"Oh yeah? I'd like nothing better than to blow your balls off."
"Just try it," he says. "You don't have the nerve."
There is a haze of blood behind my eyes and I know now I could fire a
gun at him and hit him and never be sorry. I point the gun at him and pull the
trigger, but he has been cautious enough to put it on safety. I unclick the safety,
point at his crotch.
"Hey," he yells. "Don't be crazy."
I hesitate, then I point the gun up at the tent and fire. (219-20)
As in Judith, the symbol of male power passes from the man to the woman, the male is
depicted as inept, and the castration image is emphasized by repetition. In fact, the next chapter
continues to repeat the image: she is "holding that deadly pistol at a point directly between
Jerome's legs" (221), saying, "'I'll blow your balls off'" (221), qualifying it with "'if you've got
any.... I'm probably shooting at air'" (221), and asking her belated rescuer, "'Do you think he's
got any balls, Mackenzie?'" (221). J.L.'s unladylike repetition of the word "balls" functions as
another image of her appropriating masculine power - masculine language - for herself.
Like Judith, once J.L. has shown her masculine prowess, she can reveal her femininity, can
put on feminine clothing and dance for all the men:
I'll play siren, put on the gypsy skirt that has been collecting creases in the bottom
of my knapsack these three months, gather it in my hand and jump atop that
sagging table to give them one last word, one final invocation to send them on
their way. (225)
Van Herk presents this "one last word," in sexual imagery:
And I lift up my arms and I whirl, the skirt heavy around my thighs, dance for
them until that table shivers. Whirl and kick in the ecstasy of the flames beneath
me, devouring the summer under my feet. (225)
But the dance celebrates "victory, peace regained" (226), and symbolizes the woman's power
over all the men in the mining camp:
And in their faces I see my transfiguration, themselves transformed, each one
with the tent peg through the temple cherishing the knowledge garnered in sleep,
in unwitting trust. (226)
Mackenzie responds specifically to this power in her:
Ah, Sisera, I would trade with you. I would give all I had to die at her
hand, to have her offer me bread and milk, to feel her smoothing a rug over my
tired frame and yes, to lie asleep and innocent as she lays one hand on the mallet
and the other on the tent peg and gently, oh so gently that I might never wake,
nails me to the earth, pierces my ear, my temple, with her loving wrath and
bestows on me respite, peace. (227)
As she ends her dance she metamorphoses: "no longer the witch, the saint of fire, but our own
J.L., flat and skinny as before" (227). However, the sinister powers of the witch and the
beneficent powers of the saint (Joan of Arc, used by J.L. as an image of herself on page 225)
remain active for Mackenzie: "I know the peg still lodges in my skull. I will never forget" (227).
In Judith and The Tent Peg, then, Van Herk combines images of power traditionally
ascribed to men with others traditionally ascribed to women to give her heroines power. In
Survival, Atwood describes typical heroines in Canadian novels as trapped in "the Rapunzel
Syndrome": "These heroines have internalized the values of their culture to such an extent that
they have become their own prisons" (209). Van Herk's heroines break out of the roles society
has prescribed and find power in new roles that they create for themselves which unite images of
masculine and feminine
power. The allusions to Judith, Jael, Circe, and St. Joan require us to see the modern heroines
as new incarnations of ancient archetypes of women who reject standard feminine roles in order
to accomplish significant social actions.
Van Herk writes in an essay about writing, "Art is anger. No contented person writes"
("The Art of Blackmail" 330). Alice Munro's sense of why a writer writes is quite different. She
speaks of being "very, very excited by what you might call the surface of life" (Gibson 241), the
importance of being "able to get at the exact tone or texture of how things are" (Gibson 241),
and writing as a way of getting control" (Gibson 245) of experience:
With me it has something to do with the fight against death, the feeling that we
lose everything every day, and writing is a way of convincing yourself perhaps
that you're doing something about this. (Gibson 243)
Not surprisingly, Munro's images of women's power differ markedly from Van Herk's. The
human fight against death and the genderless struggle of people to progress in spite of the fact of
death form the backdrop against which Munro's female characters seek power. In Munro's short
fiction the battle of the sexes is presented in vivid images of women as powerful and powerless
and equally vivid images of men as powerful and powerless.
Who Do You Think You Are?, published in the same year as Van Herk's Judith (1978),
contains ten stories about Rose, a woman from a small town in Ontario who becomes a
successful actress but is rather less than successful in her personal life. In her first serious
romance, recounted in "The Beggar Maid," Rose seems to be quite powerful. Her lover,
Patrick, "was the most vulnerable person Rose had ever known, he made himself so, didn't know
anything about protecting himself" (68). The narrator tells us that Rose "could make him flinch
at a vulgar word, a drawling tone" (84). Breaking her engagement to Patrick plunges him into
misery. When she becomes aware of her power to confer happiness on him by merely changing
her mind, she does so:
She was so moved, made so gentle and wistful, by the sight of him, that she
wanted to give him something, some surprising bounty, she wished to undo his
unhappiness.
Then she had a compelling picture of herself. She was running softly into
Patrick's carrel, she was throwing her arms around him from behind, she was
giving everything
back to him. Would he take it from her, would he still want it? ... This was a
violent temptation for her; it was barely resistible....
It was not resistible, after all. She did it. (96)
Rose's asking "Would he take it from her, would he still want it?" (96) suggests the
reconciliation stems not simply from nurturing tenderness but also from her need to test her
power over him, to prove she can make him want her again in spite of the insults she had
delivered as she broke the engagement.
Not surprisingly, their marriage ends in divorce; an encounter between Rose and Patrick
nine years after the divorce reveals that Rose's power to confer happiness on either Patrick or
herself is illusory. As in the earlier scene, Rose has a sudden vision of reconciliation:
And she had the same feeling that this was a person she was bound to, that by a
certain magical, yet possible trick, they could find and trust each other, and that
to begin this all that she had to do was go up and touch him on the shoulder,
surprise him with his happiness. (98)
Ironically, Rose's power in this scene is power to create an enemy rather than to confer
happiness. Munro presents her as lacking the traditional images of women's power centered in
appearance:
She thought how haggard and dreary she must look, in her rumpled trenchcoat,
her long, graying hair fallen forward around her face, old mascara smudged under
her eyes. (99)
She has, however, one important symbol of male power - success in her career:
She had become fairly well-known by this time, her face was familiar to many
people in this country. She did a television program on which she interviewed
politicians, actors, writers, personalities, and many ordinary people.... (98)
When Patrick sees her, her power is not sufficient to revive their relationship:
He made a face at her. It was a truly hateful, savagely warning, face; infantile,
self-indulgent, yet calculated; it was a timed explosion of disgust and loathing. It
was hard to believe. But she saw it. (99)
Munro tells us that Rose connects this with the desire she often sensed in people she interviewed
on television to make a face, making this seem a universal human desire, one generally repressed
except under "special circumstances" (99):
A lurid unreal place, the middle of the night, a staggering unhinging weariness,
the sudden, hallucinatory appearance of your true enemy.
... But she was not really able to understand how she could be an enemy.
How could anybody hate Rose so much, at the very moment when she was ready
to come forward with her good will, her smiling confession of exhaustion, her air
of diffident faith in civilized overtures? (99)
Rose's power to make an enemy contrasts vividly with traditional images of women as nurturing,
healing, reconciling enemies, giving life. In offering the insult when Rose wants to offer
happiness, Patrick seems to have all the power. Yet, ironically, his power to make an enemy
deprives him of any potentially good effects (on their child, for instance) that establishing a
minimal relationship with his ex-wife might have. His power to create an epiphany for Rose -
the knowledge that she could make someone hate her that much - and her power to have the
epiphany are ironically matched by Patrick's failure to understand Rose's thoughts at this
moment and her inability to communicate them. In one sense Patrick wins this small battle; in
another, he loses.
The story "Simon's Luck" shows us Rose at her most and least powerful. Unable to handle
waiting for Simon to call back after their initial glorious weekend together, she flees to
Vancouver. Munro depicts her a year later with an important role in a television series:
"possibly the best job she had ever had" (175). Again Rose's gaining this symbol of power
traditionally attributed to men is accompanied by a loss of symbols of power traditionally
attributed to women, for the role Rose plays is that of an older woman:
Some special make-up techniques, aging techniques, had to be used on her face;
the make-up man joked that if the series was a success, and ran for a few years,
these techniques would not be necessary. (175)
We see her costumed in a "dingy sweater and a head scarf" (176). Ironically, earlier in the story
Munro depicts Rose trying to look younger:
Rose was wearing a flowered cotton dress, a long dress with a tucked bodice and
puffed sleeves, which was too short in the waist and too tight in the bust to be
comfortable. There was something wrongly youthful or theatrical about it;
perhaps she was not slim enough to wear that style. Her reddish-brown hair was
dyed at home. Lines ran both ways under her eyes, trapping little diamonds of
darkened skin. (157)
These signs of aging do not prevent her picking up Simon at a party, but when he does not
return, Munro specifically calls attention to Rose's age: "what could be more desperate than a
woman of Rose's age, sitting up all night in her dark kitchen waiting for her lover?" (170).
Fleeing, she fears her loss of power due to the aging process, a process she feels does not affect
a man's power:
... she would have to be ashamed of, burdened by, the whole physical fact of
herself, the whole outspread naked digesting putrefying fact. Her flesh could
seem disastrous; thick and porous, grey and spotty. His body would not be in
question, it never would be; he would be the one who condemned and forgave
and how could she ever know if he would forgive her again? Come here, he
could tell her, or go away. Never since Patrick had she been the free person, the
one with that power; maybe she had used it all up, all that was coming to her.
(173)
But forces beyond human control are at work on Simon's body too; Rose learns during the
filming of a scene of the TV series that Simon has died of cancer of the pancreas. In the final
paragraphs of the story, Munro contrasts art and life:
People watching [the television series] trusted that they would be protected from
predictable disasters, also from those shifts of emphasis that throw the story line
open to question, the disarrangements which demand new judgments and
solutions, and throw the windows open on inappropriate unforgettable scenery.
Simon's dying struck Rose as that kind of disarrangement. It was
preposterous, it was unfair, that such a chunk of information should have been
left out, and that Rose even at this late date could have thought herself the only
person who could seriously lack power. (177)
Power is available in art, then, in a way that it is not available in life; natural forces can be
controlled by the artist to prevent
"disarrangements" that are not part of the intended artistic effect. Rose and Simon are both
victims of natural processes, and although cultural conditioning gives Simon the advantage with
respect to the aging process, both of them are equally powerless in an ultimate sense. Through
her art, Rose temporarily gains power over the processes of time and change.
The theme of human beings' lack of power against the forces of time and change also
informs the picture of the battle of the sexes Munro presents in the story "Lichen," from her
1986 collection, The Progress of Love. In this story David perceives his estranged wife, Stella,
as lacking all the traditional images of woman's power to attract: "She is a short, fat, white-haired woman, wearing jeans and a dirty T-shirt" (32). Her unattractiveness seems intentional:
David thinks that Stella has done this on purpose. It isn't just an
acceptance of natural deterioration - oh, no, it's much more. Stella would always
dramatize. But it isn't just Stella. There's the sort of woman who has to come
bursting out of the female envelope at this age, flaunting fat or an indecent
scrawniness, sprouting warts and facial hair, refusing to cover pasty veined legs,
almost gleeful about it, as if this was what she'd wanted to do all along.
Manhaters, from the start. You can't say a thing like that out loud nowadays.
(33)
The metaphor David uses to describe Stella contrasts ironically with her name, a contrast Munro
underlines by linking the name and image in one statement: "'Look what's happened to Stella,'
says David, fuming. 'She's turned into a troll'" (32). By associating a star (with all its splendid
celestial connotations) with a troll, a being who lives underground or in caves, David seems to
diminish her power over him. Yet a troll is a supernatural being, capable of using its powers for
malicious or beneficent effects; the irony of a celestial being likened to a troll makes the reader
wonder what powers Stella has and how she will use them.
Unlike Rose, Stella does not have a brilliantly successful career. She refers to herself and
her friends as "'us pensioned-off wives'" (36), though she says, "'I'm doing a piece for the
historical society and the local paper. Quite the budding authoress'" (35). Instead of symbols of
power generally attributed to men, Stella possesses the traditional nurturing powers of women;
she makes jam for all her friends, and the elderly people she visits at the
nursing home replace her children as objects of her care. Visiting her father in the nursing home
makes David recall
a picture of her as she had been twelve or fifteen years before. He saw her
coming across the lawn at a suburban party, carrying a casserole. She was
wearing a sundress.... Why did this picture please him so much? Stella coming
across the lawn, with her sunlit hair - the gray in it then merely made it ash blond
- and her bare toasted shoulders, crying out greetings to her neighbors, laughing,
protesting about some cooking misadventure. Of course the food she brought
would be wonderful, and she brought not only food but the whole longed-for
spirit of the neighborhood party. With her overwhelming sociability, she
gathered everybody in. (53)
This image of the younger Stella consists of traditional symbols of feminine power: attractive
clothing, hair, and body; association with food and nurturing; and the ability to bring people
together in social groups. But these images of power are not powerful enough; we learn that as
David watched Stella at this moment in the past, he was "stroking the cold, brown, shaved, and
prickly calf of another neighborhood wife" (53).
Past and present, David seems to have all the power. He brings along his current younger
woman when he visits Stella, and lets Stella know that he is about to leave the younger woman
for a yet younger woman. However, Munro subtly shows that the husband's power is subject to
time and change by juxtaposing him to Stella's father:
To get used to looking at his father-in-law, David tried to think of him as
a post-human development, something new in the species. Survival hadn't just
preserved, it had transformed him. Bluish-gray skin, with dark-blue spots,
whitened eyes, a ribbed neck with delicate deep hollows, like a smoked-glass
vase. (51)
David's dyed hair and his relationships with ever-younger women will not ultimately prevent his
becoming as aged, as "post-human," as his father-in-law: "'Wonder if we'll get to that stage?'"
(52) asks Stella, referring to her father's way of "'fixing up the past so anything he wishes had
happened did happen'" (52). The likening of the young to the old and the vision of male aging
counterpointed with female aging suggests neither men nor women have power in the final
analysis. Even the very young woman David now
desires is not exempt from the power of natural forces; the powerful image Munro presents is of
a photograph of the young girl, nude: forgotten in the window, it has faded until nothing is left
but "lichen":
She sees that the black pelt in the picture has changed to gray. It's a bluish or
greenish gray now. She remembers what she said when she first saw it. She said
it was lichen. No, she said it looked like lichen.... She said, "Lichen." And now,
look, her words have come true. The outline of the breast has disappeared. You
would never know that the legs were legs. The black has turned to gray, to the
soft, dry color of a plant mysteriously nourished on the rocks.
This is David's doing. He left it there, in the sun.
Stella's words have come true. (55)
For Stella, the writer, power is in words, words that have "come true," not of course, because
the troll has controlled the sun, but because the woman who is likened to a hummingbird and a
sunbeam (50) and who is associated with a vegetable garden and blackberries is in harmony with
the processes of nature rather than fighting them. The pun inherent in the title of the story -
"Lichen" / liken - suggests that woman's power - like man's, of course - resides in the ability to
liken, to make similes and metaphors and comparisons that reflect the truth about nature's
processes.
In Survival Atwood identifies four Basic Victim Positions. The characteristic stance in
Position Two is
To acknowledge the fact that you are a victim, but to explain this as an act of
Fate, the Will of God, the dictates of Biology (in the case of women, for
instance), the necessity decreed by History, or Economics, or the Unconscious,
or any other large general powerful idea. (37)
She goes on to explain that
Because the fake cause is so vast, nebulous and unchangeable, you are
permanently excused from changing it, and also from deciding how much of your
situation ... is unchangeable, how much can be changed, and how much is caused
by habit or tradition or your own need to be a victim. (37)
Munro's characters seem to be in Position Two; however, Munro's presentation ensures that we
see not merely the unchangeable aspects of their situations but also the aspects they do have the
ability and responsibility to alter and transcend. The aging process may affect women's lives
negatively with respect to their sexual power over men, but Munro emphasizes that this process
touches men too, and that for both sexes art, whether Rose's acting or David and Stella's
metaphor making, as Munro says in her interview with Gibson, "has something to do with the
fight against death" (243). Images of power, then, that Munro ascribes to her characters reveal
the power of the artistic process to transcend the "vast, nebulous, and unchangeable" (Survival
37) processes that affect human lives.
In a critique of Survival in 1978, Robin Matthews writes, "Atwood refuses to recognize the
truly strong place of many women in the sexual and social order in Canadian fiction" (127).
Whether or not Survival accurately describes the whole state of Canadian literature in 1972, it
does clarify how Canadian literature looked to Atwood at that point in time, and prompts
questions about where this vision has led her as an artist. How has this perception colored
Atwood's portraits of women in her own fiction? Has she changed her mind since 1972? Does
she still see the ideal as Basic Victim Position Four, "To be a creative non-victim" (Survival 38)?
Looking at images of power and victimization in Atwood's two most recent novels, The
Handmaid's Tale (1985) and Cat's Eye (1988), suggests that nowadays Atwood is very much
aware of "the truly strong place of women in the sexual and social order" in her own fiction.
Published a year before and a year after Munro's The Progress of Love, The Handmaid's Tale
and Cat's Eye present stronger critiques of society's role in victimizing women than Munro's
fiction does, but at the same time offer significant, sustained images of power attained through
art that parallel Munro's images.
Both Offred and Elaine are depicted as victims; yet each also has some kind of special
power. In The Handmaid's Tale, Offred, victimized by a system that reduces women to "two-legged wombs; that's all: sacred vessels, ambulatory chalices" (128), finds that the system also
reduces men to begetting machines, although "there's no doubt about who holds the real power"
(128). When the Commander to whom Offred has been given invites her to a secret rendezvous,
she expects kinky sex, but finds he wants to play Scrabble, because what was, as Offred recalls,
formerly a game of retired persons and adolescents has become "something different" (130):
Now it's forbidden, for us. Now it's dangerous. Now it's indecent. Now it's
something he can't do with his Wife. Now it's desirable. Now he's compromised
himself. It's as if he's offered me drugs. (130)
Offred's mind, especially its ability to make words, becomes the symbol of her power over the
powerful male; she extracts gifts and favors in return for playing the crossword game.
Offred's power is in language; we learn from the scholar who reports two hundred years
later that her story has been preserved because she spoke it into a tape recorder. This scholar,
male, also uses words to discuss Offred's life in Gilead. In the sharp contrast between the
empathetic emotion her words evoke in us and the lack of emotion - other than perhaps anger at
the professor's extreme objectivity - that the scholarly discourse evokes in us, Atwood provides
an image of Offred's power: the power to feel and to express that feeling in words that evoke
feeling. The professor says of Offred,
Our author, then, was one of many, and must be seen within the broad outlines of
the moment in history of which she was a part. But what else do we know about
her, apart from her age, some physical characteristics that could be anyone's, and
her place of residence? Not very much. She appears to have been an educated
woman, insofar as a graduate of any North American college of the time may be
said to have been educated. (287)
Unlike the professor, we see Offred as an individual rather than as representative. Since first
person narrative gives us a privileged inside view, we know how she feels about her experiences,
which seems more significant than what college she attended. Compare what the scholar says
about her true name with what she says about it:
She does not see fit to supply us with her original name, and indeed all official
records of it would have been destroyed upon her entry into the Rachel and Leah
Re-education Centre. "Offred" gives no clue, since, like "Ofglen" and
"Ofwarren," it was a patronymic, composed of the possessive preposition and the
first name of the gentleman in question. Such names were taken by these women
upon their entry into a connection with the household of a specific Commander,
and relinquished by them upon leaving it. (287)
My name isn't Offred, I have another name, which nobody uses now because it's
forbidden. I tell myself it doesn't matter, your name is like your telephone
number, useful only to others; but what I tell myself is wrong, it does matter. I
keep the knowledge of this name like something hidden, some treasure I'll come
back to dig up, one day. I think of this name as buried. This name has an aura
around it, like an amulet, some charm that's survived from an unimaginable
distant past. I lie in my single bed at night, with my eyes closed, and the name
floats there behind my eyes, not quite within reach, shining in the dark. (79-80)
To the scholar, Offred is an object of scientific study, to be dissected in order to add to the
world's store of knowledge about the Gilead Republic. To the reader Offred is a human being
struggling for survival, and her ability to verbalize her struggle so as to engage our emotions
rather than just our reason is the true source of her power - a power lacking in the scholar and
his verbalizations about her struggle.1
In finding power in words, in speaking, Offred has moved from being a victim into what
Atwood describes in Survival as Basic Victim Position Four, "To be a creative non-victim" (38):
In Position Four, creative activity of all kinds becomes possible. Energy is no
longer being suppressed (as in Position One) or used for displacement of the
cause, or for passing your victimization along to others ... as in Position Two;
nor is it being used for the dynamic anger of Position Three. And you are able to
accept your own experience for what it is, rather than having to distort it to make
it correspond with others' versions of it (particularly those of your oppressors).
(38-39)
By telling us her story, her version of life in Gilead, Offred is a creative non-victim. However,
the "violent duality" (to borrow Grace's phrase) of Atwood's vision, as always, colors the ending
of the novel as we see Offred again being victimized, objectified by the male professor.
Elaine, the narrator and central character of Cat's Eye, seems victimized by other women
rather than by men, and like Offred both does and does not become a creative non-victim by
voicing her emotions both verbally through her narrative and non-verbally through her paintings.
Her playmates Cordelia, Carol, and Grace victimize Elaine as a child. By criticizing her posture,
her actions,
her words, her intelligence - "'She's getting stupider,' Cordelia says" (124) - the girls create
insecurities and self-consciousness that produce great unhappiness in the child:
Once I'm outside the house there is no getting away from them. They are on the
school bus, where Cordelia stands close beside me and whispers into my ear:
"Stand up straight! People are looking!" Carol is in my classroom, and it's her
job to report to Cordelia what I do and say all day. They're there at recess, and
in the cellar at lunchtime. They comment on the kind of lunch I have, how I hold
my sandwich, how I chew. (119-20)
But Cordelia doesn't do these things or have this power over me because
she's my enemy. Far from it. I know about enemies.... With enemies you can feel
hatred, and anger. But Cordelia is my friend. She likes me, she wants to help
me, they all do. They are my friends, my girlfriends, my best friends. I have never
had any before and I'm terrified of losing them. I want to please. (120)
Later, we see that Elaine has succeeded in her career - that image of power more
traditionally ascribed to men than women but retains a strong sense of inadequacy where women
are concerned:
A woman strides towards me from the back, in a modified blonde porcupine
haircut, a purple jumpsuit and green leather boots. I know immediately that I
should not have worn this powder-blue jogging outfit. Powder-blue is
lightweight. I should've worn nun black, Dracula black, like all proper female
painters. I should have some clotted-neck vampire lipstick, instead of wimping
out with Rose Perfection. (87)
Even in her black dress (which should symbolize power) at the opening of her art exhibit Elaine
feels inadequate:
Now that I've got the thing on, it looks much the same as all the other black
dresses I've ever owned. I check it for lint, apply my pink lipstick, and end up
looking nice, as far as I can tell. Nice, and negligible.
I could jazz myself up somehow. I ought to have some dangly earrings,
some bangles, a silver bow-tie on a little chain, an outsize Isadora Duncan
strangle-yourself-by-mistake scarf, a rhinestone brooch of the thirties, in sly bad
taste. (403)
Although Elaine lacks traditional images of female power in terms of clothing, hairstyle, and
jewelry, she does have power because of her art. As with Offred's tale, double reactions to her
art counterpoint each other. On the one hand, a woman throws a bottle of ink at one of Elaine's
paintings, suggesting its power to evoke strong emotion; in contrast, comments in the gallery's
catalogue of the show drain the pictures of all emotion:
"Risley continues her disconcerting deconstruction of perceived gender and its
relationship to perceived power, especially in respect to numinous imagery," she
says. (406)
Elaine comments on the description, "If I hold my breath and squint, I can see where she gets
that" (406). The picture "One Wing," which Elaine says she painted for her brother after his
death - "This is the kind of thing we do, to assuage pain" (407) - is described in the catalogue as
"a statement about men, and the juvenile nature of war" (407). Because we have seen Elaine
and her brother as children, watched them grow up, and watched her reaction to his death earlier
in the novel, this catalogue description seems to miss the point. Elaine, unlike the seemingly
powerful woman Charna, who wrote the descriptions, is capable of expressing herself, capable
of evoking emotional responses, both in words and on canvas. Like the creative non-victim
Atwood describes in Survival, Elaine "is able to accept ... [her] own experience for what it is,
rather than having to distort it to make it correspond with others' versions of it" (39). She says
of a painting of three people she knew as a child that she painted them "Not as they were, to
themselves: God knows what they really saw in their own lives, or thought about" (407), but as
she saw them: "But why shouldn't I reward them, if I feel like it? Play God, translate them into
glory, in the afterlife of paint?" (407). This power to voice herself may give Elaine power over
time:
I may have thought I was preserving something from time, salvaging something;
like all those painters, centuries ago, who thought they were bringing Heaven to
earth, the revelations of God.... (409)
On the other hand, Elaine notes that paintings do not last forever, and that art, once made
public, becomes subject to interpretations outside the artist's control: "I can no longer control
these paintings, or tell them what to mean" (409). Time passing and audiences
reacting both limit the artist's power.
Both Cat's Eye and The Handmaid's Tale, then, indicate that Atwood has continued to
perceive the idea of the victim and the need to become a non-victim as significant. By creating
heroines who achieve power through artistic creation, Atwood provides her readers with models
of women who exemplify the creative non-victim of Basic Victim Position Four.
Looking at images of female power and lack of it in recent works of fiction by Van Herk,
Munro, and Atwood reveals that these three definers of the collective consciousness are very
aware of the question of what makes women victims and what makes them powerful. Of the
three, Van Herk takes the most strident feminist stance by presenting images in which women
are seen to have androgynous power, power combined from men's and women's traditional
sources of power; freedom of choice seems to be the ultimate power. Munro takes us beyond
the issue of male power versus female power by presenting images in which forces outside the
control of men or women have the ultimate control, levelling the power struggle to an
insignificance in the larger scheme of things while attributing great power to artistic creation, to
a human being's ability to liken. Atwood's recent writings see the female's power in terms of her
ability to voice her life and emotions so as to win an emotional response; because the power to
feel and to create feeling is for Atwood's heroines woman's true power, artistic creation becomes
the symbol of woman's greatest power.
NOTES
The research for this paper has beeb supported by The Canadian Studies FacultyResearch Programme
and St. Mary's College Faculty Development Fund.
1 In the question period following Atwood's February 1989 reading in San Francisco, she said that the
scholarly conference at the end of The Handmaid's Tale has two functions: to give information about the
Gileadean society that Offred could not know and to show that the oppressive society did not last, for scholars
again function freely and a woman chairs the conference. Freibert's article on the novel suggests ideas related to
my analysis when she states that Atwood's "Swiftean serio-comic vision comprises an ironic indictment of a
society that treats a woman's body as a pawn and her life as an academic question" (280) and says that for Offred,
creating her stories frees her from biological determinism (287).
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