Hotard Tami 1999
Hotard Tami 1999
Tami Hotard for the degree of Master of Arts in En lg ish presented on May 28; 1999.
Title: A Literary Discourse on the Evolution of Gender & Sexuality in the First and
Second Waves of Feminism: Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yelllow Wallpaper"
Deconstructs Established Gender Roles as Willa Cather's "Paul's Case" Reconstructs
Them
Abstract approved:
The two literary touchstones of Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Willa Cather
examined in this thesis anchored a larger discussion of the discourse about gender and
sexuality during the First and Second Waves of feminism in America. "The Yellow
of the century in America, while Cather's "Paul's Case" reconstructed the notion of
"masculinity." Both Cather and Gilman wrote their short stories at the turn of the
century in America during the First Wave of Feminism yet they resurfaced in
discussions about gender and sexuality in the Second Wave of Feminism. Readings of
both Cather and Gilman's writings have evolved with the First and Second Waves
because their protagonists defied and undercut the established social norms enabling
them to be re-examined much after their publication date. Although their writing styles
are different, Gilman and Cather share a complex understanding of gender and sexuality
that earmark the social position of women in America which can be interpreted by the
During the First Wave of Feminism, women discussed how their ability to
reproduce contributed to unbalanced gender relations, caused middle and upper class
women to remain confined to the household, and economically dependent upon their
sickened many women and left them reliant on their physician's care as well.
Challenging this social structure, Gilman recorded her experience after being diagnosed
with neurasthenia by Dr. Mitchell, ordered to remain in bed for months while
consuming fatty foods and with no support from friends. Meanwhile, Cather expressed
her discontent with the social construction of gender in America by asserting a male
character that reconsidered the established norms for men and women of Victorian
America.
When the Second Wave of Feminism emerged in America, the discussions about
gender and sexuality reread these touchstone texts of Gilman and Cather as flexible
visions of reality but in different discursive contexts depending on the social time frame
in which they reviewed them. In the 1960s, the Women's Rights Movement and the
political voice and the "problem with no name." While in the 1970s, discussions about
gender and sexuality concluded that the "sex/gender system," also known as patriarchy,
defeated their purpose toward complete liberation because of its economic structure
aimed at benefiting men. Although they appreciated the notion of a collective voice for
all women, the development of individual voices among women played a more
significant role in the 1970's discourses about gender and sexuality. Because men have
predominantly controlled the medical field, women in the 1970s, who wrote about
gender and sexuality then, also attacked physicians like Dr. Mitchell who diagnosed
women with strange treatments and also worked for the prohibition of the practice of
mid-wifery in America at the turn of the century. Other critics of the 1970s decided that
Cather's life reflected that of a lesbian, so that by the 1980s, literary discourses
involving gender and sexuality began asking questions about the purpose of Cather and
Gilman's writings. If female authors like Cather and Gilman lived such politically
conscious lives, then why did they not create narratives that reflected their political
agendas? After questioning their narratives, some critics decided that Cather and
Gilman carried a "duplicitous nature" or a twofold message in their short yet complex
stories. This duplicitous style of writing explained how that by the 1990s discussions
about gender and sexuality had evolved into the "crafting of characters" that resulted in
While First and Second Wavers fought for the elimination of binary gender
divisions and a balance in gender relations that supported the economic development of
all women in America, Cather and Gilman's writings facilitated discussions during both
Waves that contributed to the reasons why the social construction of gender and
sexuality did not result in equal human treatment, and should therefore be reconstructed.
The literature concerning women during the First and Second Waves of
question of the nature and genesis of women's oppression and social subordination, and
how to change its effects on the future of the human race. What started off as strictly
constructed and enforced gender roles in Victorian America evolved into gender
performativity in the latter part of this century. This socio-sexuo evolution lies within
the protagonists' discontent and total rebellion in Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" and
Cather's "Paul's Case," whose stories both surfaced at the turn of the 20th century in
America, when socially-conscious citizens inspected these rigid Victorian ideals, and
whose stories later resurfaced again during the Second Wave of Feminism at the middle
to end of the 20th century, when individuals re-enacted these same socially constructed
Lather's "Paul's Case" functions as a touchstone of her short fiction that even
Cather agreed valued notice, since she only allowed it to be reprinted of all her other
examination of say The Professor's House and A Lost Lady as well as My Antonia to
elusive authorial approach toward gender and sexuality that has made her reputation
outlast herself, should reveal even a deeper sense of her literary complexities. Gilman's
utopian novels, Moving the Mountain, Herland, and With Her in Ourland, that came
after "The Yellow Wallpaper" deserve a closer look in the same respect as she struggled
to portray the possibilities and barriers facing a woman who attempted to combine love
and work. The movement in Gilman's writing progressively develops the possibilities
and highlights the key barriers for a woman: female resistance to social change and
male incomprehension concerning the necessity for love and work in a woman's life.
She visualized the transition from the present to the future as one of internal conversion
interior power and men renouncing oppressive power structures as individuals and as a
society. Perhaps too this is why Gilman, like Cather, switched to a male narrator in
By
Tami Hotard
A THESIS
submitted to
in partial fulfillment of
the requirements for the
degree of
Master of Arts
lal /
APPROVED:
Ic
Major Professor, representing English
I understand that my thesis will become part of the permanent collection of Oregon
upon request.
Acknowledgments
her professionalism and continued support throughout the entire process of my graduate
thesis.
Shaw of the Women's Studies Program also should be acknowledged for their patience
and for their critical eye that helped me with editing my thesis. Professor Sonia
Representative can prove to be a vital role in the undertaking of a graduate thesis that
covers over one hundred years of discussions about gender and sexuality.
When people ask me how long it took me to write my graduate thesis, I think for
a moment, and almost have to say since I was born, because it seems to me that since
that date my life reflects this entire process. However, over the past year while I did the
majority of the writing of my graduate thesis, certain individuals should be noted for
their support: Teresa Manning, Taylor Heath, David Kellum and Marilyn Kelly.
Without these people I feel my thesis would have been an insurmountable task and one
that involved too many personal reminders that I wanted to forget. Each of these people
contributed uniquely to the completion of my thesis and inspired me in their own unique
Page
1. Introduction ...........................................................................................................1
V. Conclusion ..........................................................................................................78
Endnotes ..........................................................................................................................82
Bibliography ....................................................................................................................86
A Literary Discourse on the Evolution of Gender & Sexuality in the First & Second
Waves of Feminism: Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" Deconstructs
Established Gender Roles as Willa Cather's "Paul's Case" Reconstructs Them
1. Introduction.
This thesis focuses on the discourse about gender and sexuality during the 20th
century in America, using as literary touchstones two short stories: Charlotte Perkins
Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" and Willa Cather's "Paul's Case." Because Gilman
and Cather created their stories in the early part of this century, when the First Wave of
during the Second Wave of Feminism in America, a discussion of these pieces will
anchor the larger discussion of the discourse about gender and sexuality during the First
discourse about the history of feminism, the terms "first wave" and "second wave"
then a rebirth. This discourse also suggests that these feminist waves occur in cyclical
motion with fluidity. For these reasons, it becomes almost impossible to precisely
pinpoint the beginning and the ending of such feminist waves. Are we in 1999 still in
the second wave? Will the new millenium be a new beginning, or a time of remission,
prior to the next wave? Or, are we already in a feminist "third wave" at the end of the
twentieth century?
For purposes of this graduate thesis, the dates for the "first wave" of feminism
and the "second wave" (give or take a few years) can be determined as the following:
the "first wave" dates are 1850 through the 1930; then the "second wave" 1960 through
the 1990s (Nicholson 1). To designate exact "first wave" and "second wave" dates is
2
not entirely important, for in doing so, it limits the intellectual discourse and the very
essence of this American literary herstory. Nonetheless, this thesis does not completely
disregard the importance of precision and specific dates but rather sets a time frame that
allows for evolution. It does so to steer away from the phallocentric order of ideas that
reifies ideas within time. I argue that feminist theory, along with its ideology, is a
continuum.
In the "first wave" of feminism, women discussed how their ability to reproduce
was a site for all women's oppression. They also argued against the sexuo-economic
relationship that bound middle and upper class women to the home after giving birth to
numerous children. Further, these women were a reserve capitalistic workforce, second
to men--and, third, if they were women of color or poor. More to the point, women at
the turn of the century debated the unequal structure of our economy where women
were confined to the home and men were allowed to generate revenue through outside
affected many women so that some began questioning the male-dominated medical
field that authorized itself to diagnose feminine maladies and to prescribe strange and
unusual treatments for them, while suppressing the practice of mid-wifery. For
example, women like Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935) kept records of their
horrific experiences after having been diagnosed with neurasthenia by Dr. S. Weir
Mitchell and confined to the bed for months with his "rest cure treatment." Gilman as
well as Jane Addams wrote about the restrictive life forced upon women by the sexuo-
degenerative species who specialized in sexual functions and the home. After being
3
heavily criticized for starting America's first Birth Control League, Margaret Sanger
published a compilation consisting of hundreds of real life stories that revealed how
many women, whom she referred to as "breeders," because they had given birth to
several children, had also suffered through multiple miscarriages and multiple
abortions. During this period, Willa Cather(1873-1947) challenged the limited gender
role allotted to women by developing stories using the literary freedom of a male voice.
"Paul's Case" shall be examined here as a touchstone of Cather's work and how female
authors strove to overcome the boundaries set by strict American Victorian ideals.
Likewise, Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" shall be examined because of its defiant
components that explored why women at the turn of the century in America went
insane, not only because of their confining domestic allotment, but because of the
wrongfully diagnosed treatment forced upon them from within the male-dominated
medical field. Readings of both Gilman and Cather's writings evolved with the First and
Second waves because of the ways their protagonists defied and undercut the
established social norms. These touchstone texts can be classified as flexible visions of
reality and have been reread in different discursive contexts depending on the social
The "second wave" of feminism returned in the 1960s with the emergence of the
women who began putting pressure on federal and state institutions to end the
discrimination that women experienced in entering the paid labor force. This
movement also drew on the dissatisfaction felt by many middle class housewives with
their lot as housewives" (Nicholson 1). In the latter part of the 1960s, another
4
movement independent of this one emerged out of the New Left, the Women's
Liberation Movement. "It is from the Women's Liberation Movement that most of the
By the 1970s, most second wave feminists felt dissatisfied with the feminist
exclusion within their discourse of lesbians, women of color, and working class women,
who argued against many of the texts and demands of the feminist movement. There
were few that acknowledged differences among women. "However, such assertions of
(Nicholson 4). The 1980s discourse about gender and sexuality grappled with the
notion of difference and the significance of uniqueness in the voices among women
who were formerly grouped together incorrectly by the feminist movement. For
assumption that most women are naturally heterosexual. Rather, she suggested that
experience, [and] not simply the fact that a woman has had or consciously desired
genital sexual experience with another woman" (135). By the 1990s, the notion of a
common language, the hegemonic messages this universal language sent out, and the
negative interpretations of the notion of "woman," so that the idea of "woman" has
The issue of significance here in both waves is the fostering of a discourse about
gender balance. At the turn of the century men and women encountered strict rules on
gender; by the 1990s, feminist discourse on gender viewed gender as an act that one
performs from the time they wake up in the morning to put on their clothes until they
get in bed and undress their gender at night. For this reason, "performance" became a
key term and continuing motif in the 1990's discussions of gender and sexuality. After
examining the reception of "Paul's Case" and "The Yellow Wallpaper" in the first and
second waves, it becomes clear that the shift in their critical evaluation suggests that
America's scope in understanding gender and sexuality issues has expanded so that
twenty first century authors, unlike Cather and Gilman, who had to either conceal their
forthright in their fictional challenges, possess more authorial freedom in their literary
creations and choice with regard to style. Theatricality can certainly be unrobed in both
For these reasons, authors like Willa Cather and Charlotte Perkins Gilman who
lived and wrote at the turn of the century in America have resurfaced in the
contemporary discourse about gender, and their writings a central angle to both the first
and second feminist waves. Quite possibly the third. They wrote about the imbalance
in gender relations during their time. Paul's story challenges the defined "masculine"
gender role and reconstructs it. Gilman's rediscovery proves that her heroine's horror
story of hysteria deconstructs the traditional way women were told to act and how they
for "manliness." "Early on in Roosevelt's political career, he was ridiculed and even
compared to the infamous Oscar Wilde, who went to trial for sodomy," but once
Roosevelt embraced his "manliness," the American public began to modify their
negative opinions of him from "weakling" to the positive "Cowboy of the Dakotas"
(Bederman 171). "Roosevelt's great success in masculinizing his image was due, in
large part, to his masterful use of the discourse of civilization" (Bederman 171). He
constructed his persona as a strong but civilized white man. "As he saw it, the United
American men enacted their superior manhood by asserting imperialistic control over
races of inferior manhood" (171). Instead of working together to develop America, the
manly solution was to oppress the Other, those they thought were the embodiment of an
inferior race, or gender. "To prove their virility, as a race and a nation, American men
imperialistic warfare and racial violence if necessary" (172). These were the defining
kindhearted manly chivalry and aggressive masculine violence" and required "serious
attention and strenuous effort" (172). Roosevelt, like his father and other Victorian
7
men, embodied this mold of masculinity. "Throughout his life, [Roosevelt] would
and chastity-and identify it with both the manful strength of his father and his own
authority as a member of the upper class"(172). Most American men then followed
While men in America, like Roosevelt, were fighting to prove their "manliness,"
that the future of America would be better. Her social vision was one of a balance
between man and woman, and even the art on the cover of her monthly publication The
Forerunner, which she self-published for nine years, portrayed a woman and a man
mutually supporting a child who stood atop a globe. Ironically, she wrote "The Yellow
Wallpaper" to express her true discontent and real life experience of having been
diagnosed with a "nervous prostration" that confined her to bed for months because of
the ill-directed treatment of Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, a famous nerve specialist at that time
in America.
pervaded upper- and upper-middle-class female culture," mostly because of a trend that
developed resulting from "the boredom and confinement of affluent women [which]
nineteenth century and did not completely fade until the late 1910s"(E & E 17). They
note Gilman as concluding bitterly "that American men `have bred a race of women
weak enough to be handed about like invalids; or mentally weak enough to pretend they
are-and to like it"'(19). However, Ehrenreich and English recognize that "all women
8
faced certain risks that men did not share, or share to the same degrees," those being the
risks affiliated with childbearing and tuberculosis, or the "white plague" which was
common in young women in the mid nineteenth century(19). In their earlier Witches,
Midwives and Nurses, Ehrenreich and English observe that "for the doctors, the myth of
female frailty thus served two purposes. It helped them to disqualify women as healers,
and, of course, it made women highly qualified as patients"(23). "So," they conclude,
"it was in the interests of the doctors to cultivate the illnesses of their patients with
frequent home visits and drawn-out `treatments.' A few dozen well-heeled lady
customers were all that a doctor needed for a successful urban practice"(24). By
presenting the medical industry from a feminist perspective, Ehrenreich & English show
how "the upper-middle-class woman was the ideal patient"(24). More specifically,
Mitchell "expressed his profession's deep appreciation of the female invalid in 1888."
Ehrenreich & English cite him as asserting, "with all her weakness, her unstable
emotionality, her tendency to morally warp when long nervously ill, she is then far
easier to deal with, far more amenable to reason, far more sure to be comfortable as a
patient, than the man who is relatively in a like position"(24). Keeping these women
believing they were sick not only perpetuated Mitchell's medical career but also
Finally, they noted how some women could "turn the sick role to their own
supporting her claims to be too sick for sex: he could recommend abstinence"(38-39).
Suggesting the notion of theatrics, Ehreneich and English concluded, "so who knows
how many of this period's drooping consumptives and listless invalids were actually
9
how married women at the turn of the century evaded pregnancy because of their
discussed later on in this thesis in more detail. Ehrenreich and English's conclusion
seem to describe Gilman's situation seeing that she did not want to have any more
children, once her daughter Katherine was born. Ehrenreich and English also
commented on the power of melodrama to give women a hold over their husbands and
others as they incorporated it into their hysterical symptoms: "As a power play,
throwing a fit might give a brief psychological advantage over a husband or a doctor,
but ultimately it played into the hands of the doctors confirming their notion of women
as irrational, unpredictable, and diseased"(4 1). Even if women tapped into this power
source in order to exercise control over their doctor or husband, the power in the
melodrama of hysteria was only temporary and even worked against them in the long
term. Ehrenreich and English pointed out that performance did indeed establish its
roots in the history of hysteria. However, they did not focus their discussion on
hysteria's male counterpart that also existed at the turn of the century possibly perhaps
"Paul's Case" presents a protagonist, Paul, who exhibits some hysterical traits that
relate to "gender performance" ("his eyes were remarkable for a certain hysterical
brilliancy, and he used them in a conscious, theatrical sort of way, peculiarly offensive
in a boy"[Cather 164]), which has been strictly and intentionally associated with
10
women's sphere of existence at the turn of the century in America, except for a few
male instances documented in Dr. Jean Martin Charcot's recently translated medical
journals in thel990s. Dr. Charcot, a 19`h century Parisian neurologist who influenced
Sigmund Freud to pursue the psychological causes of and possible cures for hysteria,
examined hypnotic phenomena and studied cases of hysteria while developing the
approximately 100 male hysteric case studies, "[Charcot's] case studies are as crucial to
disguise"(64). Since the medical field has been predominated historically by men, it is
no doubt that this intentional concealment of male hysteria occurred. Showalter cites
Michael Micale who two years earlier, in Approaching Hysteria, noted that these
hysterical medical documents have been concealed because they reveal "normative
gender representations, encoded ideals of normal and abnormal masculinity that repay
investigation by the social, cultural, and medical historian" (Showalter 64). Charcot's
journals evidence the existence of male hysteria, which in a sense for Victorian society
"proved" a male effeminate, because women were only known to have hysterical
tendencies, and it demeaned the male ego to have evidence that proved that men
suffered from hysteria, too. These hysterical men had added an extra feminine
which society had no desire to confront. In his "Introduction," Micale recognized that
"the work of historicians and critics in this tradition shares the view that hysteria may
be read as a kind of metaphor both for women's position in past patriarchal societies
and for the image of the feminine in the history of scientific discourse"(8). Hysteria, and
its history, has been a systematic medical endeavor to create a female-only psychology.
of the polarization of gender roles as they were constructed at the turn of the century.
"Doctors frequently prescribed the rest cure for neurasthenic women, but not for men.
...With middle-class men the preferred treatment for neurasthenia was travel, adventure,
withdraw from any social activities and were thought to become healthier if they
reaching cultural and psychological parallelism between the two entities: both feminism
and hysteria, she contends, are "violent reactions against male-dominated societies--
feminism in the world of organized public politics, hysteria in the realm of private
hysteria was two-dimensional: physicians and laymen often branded voluble members
strategies such as hunger strikes, a sort of willful collective anorexia, in the pursuit of
their political goals"(85). In this way, the role of gender establishes its history in the
disease of hysteria. Further, Micale sees that "it is not surprising that our historical
understanding of the subject should have developed in this way," because he sees,
12
(150). Women have historically been referred to as the emotional gender while men are
the rational ones. `By its nature, it is a highly corporealized pathology in which
psychological anxieties are played out on the stage of the human body"(Micale 150).
Self-dramatization is an inherent part of hysteria, and women are associated with this
theatrical performance.
Perhaps because women have been historically noticed for their emotional
observations also signify possibly why women who have been diagnosed as hysterical
have not been taken seriously, as if they were performing their sickness or
uncomfortable allotment in life, and not because they were ever physically ill. Micale
points out that "it is imperative to maintain a distinction between the medicating
"most spectacular aspects of hysteria's history" have been portrayed, and thus have
become representatives of the medical malady. These intricate distinctions locate where
women enter the scene, and show how "upper and upper-middle-class women" have
Wallpaper," The Captive Imagination, elaborated the negative social effects of Patrick
evolution that detailed the social construction of, as well as the medical reasoning for,
treating women differently from men when either one reported hysterical tendencies to
their physician. Conway reminds us how, as a result of doctors like Weir Mitchell, as
13
well as the social class in which he and Gilman and Cather lived, stereotypes of
the `emotional, intuitive female' who must conserve energy for survival, provides a
context for understanding two components of the rest cure treatment which Mitchell
prescribed and Gilman defied"(Golden 71). They include (1) "total and enforced bed
rest for periods of six to eight weeks"; and (2) "excessive feeding" of fatty foods while
being physically restricted to only their bed. The logic in this prescription was that
when these medically diagnostic elements were combined, energy would be restored to
women, and their neurasthenic tendencies gone. However, the rest cure did not stop
there; it also included total social isolation and absolutely no writing, mental or
intellectual stimulation. In other words, women were transformed into infants and
isolated from any support network to "encourage" her recovery. `By making sperm and
ovum exhibit the qualities of male katabolism or female anabolism Geddes deduced a
dichotomy between the temperaments of the sexes which was easily accommodated to
the romantic idea of male rationality and female intuition"(Golden 74). He believed
that "male cells had the power to transmit variation along with their tendency to
dissipate energy, [and that] female cells by contrast had the power to conserve energy,
support new life, and to maintain stability in new forms of life"(Golden 73). In other
words, sex differences should be viewed as arising from a basic difference in cell
His scientific study did not lead to the romantic ideas of heterosexual love; his
scientific social theory reinforced it. However, Geddes recognized the possibilities for
14
an active woman in the future, but she had to somehow maintain her passivity. In fact,
with men [and] would be socially dangerous"(Golden 75). In other words, women
clear that the male savage rested to accumulate the energy for sudden bursts of hunting,
while the female merely kept going at routine occupations"(Golden 76). More specific,
he saw, as Conway rightfully observes, "there was injustice in the routine"(Golden 76).
Total and enforced bed rest for periods of six to eight weeks these doctors believed
restored energy to neurasthenic women while excessive feeding increased body volume
and thus provided them with new stores of energy. Conway's essay serves as a
reminder of the theories of sex differentiation and the social position of women in the
she is most known for "The Yellow Wallpaper," a short but potent tale about the horror
of her real life experiences through the fictional depiction of a female protagonist. After
having been diagnosed with neurasthenia, her heroine was prescribed the rest cure
treatment by a famous "nerve specialist," and she was confined to her bed for months,
as Gilman was. The heroine went insane, but in real life Gilman recorded her terrible
experience with Dr. Mitchell's rest cure treatment that symbolized women's struggles,
15
not only with gender roles but also with the patriarchal understanding of what
constituted a qualified publishable text, which shall be explained in more detail further
century in America because it crystallizes key issues in the discourse of gender and
sexuality; the rationality for establishing such allotted roles; the biological essence of
such socially constructed roles; and the reality of the performance of such roles,
reflecting turn of the century thinking. From a 21S` century point of view, Gilman's
Yellow Wallpaper" secretly kept a diary, recording her horrific experience while being
subjected to the inhumane treatment of being confined for months to a double bed
nailed to the floor in a former nursery. "Inevitably, too, [women] expressed their
Treatment" for the narrator's neurasthenia, which ordered her to complete inactivity,
including not allowing her to write, she defied his treatment with the notion it was more
hurtful toward her than helpful with her condition, and recorded her experience.
16
Fat and Blood written by Mitchell contains an in-depth and graphic description of the
rest cure. However, it only worked on the symptoms and not the sources.
"The Yellow Wallpaper," which was first published in the January 1892 issue of
the New England Magazine, received mixed reactions because of its elements that
contradicted the traditional roles of a woman and blatantly told of the horrors of them.
In fact, Gilman was lucky it was even released to the public with her name on it.
Gilman had learned that her agent at the time, Henry Austin, had sent it to the magazine
for review and pocketed the forty dollars the publication had intended to pay her.
Austin was not the only one who worked against Gilman's literary success.
Initially, Gilman had sent "The Yellow Wallpaper" to William Dean Howells,
and he, after noticing some of its merit, forwarded it on to Horace Scudder, the then
editor of the Atlantic Monthly, a well known publication in the United States.
However, Scudder's criticism did not stop Gilman's pursuit of having her story told.
"In the 1890s, editors, and especially Scudder, still officially adhered to a canon of
`moral uplift' in literature, and Gilman's story," Elaine Hedges posits in her 1973
Afterword, "with its heroine reduced at the end to the level of a groveling animal,
scarcely fitted the prescribed formula. One wonders, however, whether hints of the
how he sympathized, even related, to the female protagonist's feelings and the story's
merit. Yet he did not want to take the risk of publishing it.
Once the story was published and reviewed in 1892, the medical profession
received "The Yellow Wallpaper's" clinical content with both positive and negative
feedback. "It certainly seems open to serious question if such literature should be
17
permitted in print," one doctor wrote in 1892, following its initial publication, in an
article entitled "Perilous Stuff' sent in protest to the Boston Transcript. "The story can
hardly, it would seem, give pleasure to any reader, and to many whose lives have been
touched through the dearest ties by this dread disease, it must bring the keenest pain.
derangement, such literature contains deadly peril." He ended his letter by asking,
"Should such stories be allowed to pass without severest censure?" and signed it only
"M.D." (Gilman 64). In contrast, another doctor, Brummel Jones of Kansas City,
Missouri, wrote Gilman personally, and praised her literary efforts, which Gilman
recorded in her published autobiography The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: An
Autobiography. He wrote, "I was very much pleased with it; when I read it again I was
delighted with it, and now that I have read it again I am overwhelmed with the delicacy
of your touch and the correctness of portrayal." Then, he confirmed Gilman's account
by adding that, "From a doctor's standpoint, and I am a doctor, you have made a
success. So far as I know, and I am fairly well up in literature, there has been no
detailed account of incipient insanity." The insanity that was becoming apparent,
however, to Gilman, was the insanity in the practice of this form of treatment and the
pursuit of a society that perpetuates its constant use of it. Moreover, in Livin , Gilman
acknowledges her "purpose" for inventing "The Yellow Wallpaper" that was "to reach
Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, and convince him of the error of his ways ... I met some one who
knew close friends of Dr. Mitchell's who said he had told them that he had changed his
treatment of nervous prostration since reading `The Yellow Wallpaper.' If that is a fact,
I have not lived in vain" (Dock 24). Identifying by name within the story, Gilman had
decided who her target audience was: Dr. S. Weir Mitchell. Yet I insist her mission
was to reach women also. Unfortunately, "that same year, [Mitchell] wrote to Andrew
Carnegie that he wanted to build a hospital for the `Rest Treatment for the Poor"'(Dock
25). The medical villain had not been reformed and actually attempted to broaden his
18
practice beyond middle and upper class women to incorporate poor women into his
practice of the rest treatment. A brief discussion of "The Yellow Wallpaper" follows.
In the story, John, a physician, and his wife (name not provided) move for the
summer to stay in the nursery of "a colonial mansion, a hereditary estate" out of town
that has been vacant for years, because her doctor Mitchell (and the forthright Gilman
directly refers to his name within the text on page 18) had diagnosed her with a nervous
condition. Further, he said that she had a "slight hysterical tendency"2 about her and
that she must rest without any type of exercise or work, and was not allowed to write
either. She described the nursery as "a big, airy room, the whole floor nearly, with
windows that look all ways, and air and sunshine galore. It was nursery first and then
playroom and gymnasium, I should judge; for the windows are barred for little children,
and there are rings and things in the walls"(12) The narrator's description of the room
suggests that the room functioned in the past as a type of torture chamber for children.
The narrator provided additional information that proved this: "The paint and the paper
look as if a boys' school had used it. It is stripped off-the paper-in great patches all
around the head of my bed, about as far as I can reach, and in a great place on the other
side of the room low down. I never saw a worse paper in my life" (12). From the
narrator's point of inspection, whoever had previously been restrained in this room
peeled the paper off the walls near the headboard of the bed and had probably been tied
to the bed. The other places where the paper had been peeled back were low to the
ground, which supports the premise that this room functioned as a disciplinary location
In fact, the controlling way John treats his wife resembles that of a parent with
their child. Her husband John insures that his wife obeys the rest treatment prescription.
"[John] is very careful and loving, and hardly lets me stir without special direction. I
have a schedule prescription for each hour in the day; he takes all care from me, and so
I feel basely ungrateful not to value it more. He said we came here solely on my
19
account, that I was to have perfect rest" (12). Even though she believed "that congenial
work, with excitement and change, would do me good"(10), she has internalized guilt
for being unappreciative of John's efforts to help her condition. Hence, Gilman created
a heroine's story of how she went insane after being locked up in this one room without
any outside stimulus.
The narrator does however have a few visitors who come to the estate to see her.
One visitor, John's sister Nellie, who assists in the carrying out the treatment, forces the
narrator to have to conceal from her the writing efforts she makes while being confined
to the nursery, because Nellie completely adheres to John's orders. The narrator told of
her: "Such a dear girl as she is, and so careful of me! I must not let her find me writing.
She is a perfect and enthusiastic housekeeper, and hopes for no better profession. I
verily believe she thinks it is the writing which made me sick! But I can write when she
is out, and see her a long way off from these windows" (18). Nellie conforms to the
allotted role for women at the turn of the century in perfecting her housekeeping duties.
Gilman's use of the word "profession" earmarks precisely where women contributed
economically at the turn of the century: in the household as a maid. Any other role a
women undertook could be construed, then, as satanic, masculine, deceptive, and
against the overall primary functions socially allotted to women at the turn of the
century.
As the story progresses, the yellow wallpaper begins to take on life forms and
the narrator's descent into madness is enhanced by that peculiarity. "This wall-paper
has a kind of sub-pattern in a different shade, a particularly irritating one, for you can
only see it in certain lights, and not clearly then. But, in the places where it isn't faded
and where the sun is just so," she decides, "I can see a strange, provoking, formless sort
of figure, that seems to skulk about behind that silly and conspicuous front design"(18).
Gilman's protagonist admits of her private relationship with the wall paper designs that
only she can see. "There are things in that paper that nobody knows but me, or ever
20
will. Behind that outside pattern the dim shapes get clearer every day. She visualizes
the shapes to be "like a woman stooping down and creeping about behind that pattern"
(22). This woman desires to be released, because as she reports, "the faint figure behind
seemed to shake the pattern, just as if she wanted to get out"(23). This figure in the
nursery interests the narrator so that she secretly watches the women in the wall at night
While John was sleeping she watched: "He thought I was asleep at first, but I
wasn't, and lay there for hours trying to decide whether that front pattern and the back
pattern really did move together or separately"(25). As she investigates the wall paper
designs, the narrator decides these designs are actually women restrained behind them.
pattern I mean, and the woman behind it is as plain as can be"(26). Eventually the
figure imprisoned within the wallpaper begins to haunt her and even multiplies. The
narrator confesses, "I think there are a great many women" (30). It soon becomes
obvious that the figure behind the "horrible yellow-wallpaper" is the double of the
narrator herself, which becomes by the end of the story enabled to escape from her own
confinement: "I pulled and she shook, I shook and she pulled, and before the morning
we had peeled off yards of that paper" (32). Likewise, with the narrator, her final words
are "I've got out at last... in spite of you and Jane. And I've pulled off most of the
paper, so you can't put me back!"(36). With these words, John fainted in front of her,
another sign that the gender roles were shifting because only women were thought to
actually faint.
roles after being prescribed the rest cure treatment and ordered to remain confined to
"rest" for three months. Although Gilman provided the narrator no name, she wore the
21
face of many women at the turn of the century across America who suffered through
similar medical treatments. In this short story, Gilman confronted these inequities by
publishing her open disgust at the social construction of gender in America. "The
Yellow Wallpaper" is a story of one woman who went insane, yet in Gilman's creating
a story that confronted such political issues, her readers should have wondered: Did
the narrator go insane due to suffering from a nervous condition, or actually, did the
heroine go insane because of her realization of the confined role women held in
society?
With this question and other mysteries about Gilman's writing agenda and her
imagination left unanswered, other female writers adopted a male protagonist, like
Cather did in "Paul's Case," where the issue of women's confinement sent her
imagination into a different direction. Although Gilman focused her writing agenda
toward expressing how women had become historically confined to the home, and in
this instance a room, Cather in "Paul's Case" exhibited how men felt trapped in
"Paul's Case," the best known of Cather's first collection of short stories, Troll
Garden, came out in 1905, just before she joined the McClure's staff and became a top
editor. Unlike Gilman, Cather encountered no initial publishing problems and only
made one attempt with McClure's where a contract was immediately signed. However,
the critical reception of Cather's first collection of short stories resembled Gilman's
Bessie du Bois in 1905 in The Bookman, the critic's remarks were entirely unfavorable
in declaring that, after reading The Troll Garden, "one feels rather defrauded that the
22
author has omitted to say what came next; it would have been so easy to go on" (613).
More obviously blatant in her disapproval, she criticized the stories as "a collection of
freak stories that are either lurid, hysterical or unwholesome"(612). Yet, another
reviewer was more concerned with biographical detail than with the author's method of
creating fiction, particularly in "Paul's Case." This 1905 Bookman review, "Chronicle
and Comment," included positive assessments like, "this story, of all the stories in the
book, comes nearest to being based on actual occurrences; so that Miss Cather's
psychology is all the more a remarkable attainment ...Miss Cather herself is a hard-
Pittsburgh, where Cather was writing at the time and its scenes have been noted to be
Bookman, entitled "Chronicle and Comment" (1905), that two boys employed by a firm
that managed a large estate ran away with two thousand dollars. They were found at the
Auditorium Hotel in Chicago about ten days later, their money gone, and they were
brought home. The papers were full of the affair for a time, but as one of the boys was
a minister's son, and as the money was refunded, the firm did not prosecute.
Similar to the "The Yellow Wallpaper," Howells chose "Paul's Case" as one of
the anthologized Great Modern American Stories and for many years it was the only
one of the set in The Troll Garden that Cather would permit to be published after its
original release. "Paul's Case" is a story of a young teenage boy, and quite presumably
effeminate, who commits suicide because no one in his life-his teachers or his
family-understand his way of thinking and his approach to life that contradicted his
23
allotted "masculine" role. The theater where he worked and New York city where he
ran away prior to his death were the only places he felt he could relax and be himself.
In the beginning of the story, Paul is facing expulsion from high school for
disrespecting authority, the underlying cause his total discontent with the whole
educational enterprise. The teachers are not unkind, but Paul's strange demeanor (he
enters "suave and smiling" with a red carnation in his button hole) both baffles and
angers them. 3 At the end of the hearing, they leave feeling "dissatisfied and unhappy;
humiliated to have felt so vindictive toward a mere boy." Paul rushes off to his
ushering job at Carnegie Hall, first going up to the picture gallery in the Hall, where "he
sat down before a blue Rico and lost himself." Later, after helping patrons to their
seats, he falls into a similar dreamy state as the symphony begins ("he lost himself as he
After the concert is over, Paul delays long enough to follow the singer's carriage
and watch her enter the hotel: "he seemed to feel himself go after her up the steps, into
the warm, lighted building, into an exotic, a tropical world of shiny, glistening surfaces
and basking ease." A gust of cold wind and rain in his face rouses him, and he takes the
cars to Cordelia Street, "where all the houses were exactly alike." He pictures to
himself his upstairs room, with its "horrible yellow wallpaper, ... and over his painted
wooden bed the pictures of George Washington and John Calvin, and the framed motto
`Feed My Lambs,' which had been worked in red worsted by his mother." He expected
his father, with his endless questions and complaints, to be standing at the top of the
stairs. Paul's mother had died when he was a baby, and Paul lives with his father and
When the school principal reports that Paul has not improved following the
faculty hearing, Paul's father takes him out of school and finds a place for him as a cash
boy with a mercantile company Denny & Carson-the first step, as Cordelia Street sees
it, to a solid future. Further, Paul is required to quit ushering, and the doorkeeper is to
Paul runs away to New York after having stolen almost a thousand dollars in
cash from Denny & Carson, checks into the Waldorf hotel, and goes on an expensive
shopping spree including Tiffany's. It had been "astonishingly easy," and now Paul
looks ahead with relief to a few "precious days" of ease: "This time there would be no
awakening, no figure at the top of the stairs." He luxuriates at the hotel and then goes
out on the town where he meets a male freshman at Yale. "Everything was quite
perfect; he was exactly the kind of boy he had always wanted to be."
On the eighth day, he learned from the newspapers that his theft had been
discovered, and that his father was in New York looking for him: "It was to be worse
than jail, even; the tepid waters of Cordelia Street were to close over him finally and
forever. The grey monotony stretched before him in hopeless, unrelieved years;
Sabbath school, Young People's Meeting, the yellow-wallpapered room, the damp dish-
towels. After staying one more night, Paul takes the ferry to New Jersey, then hires a
horse taxi to drive him into the countryside by the railroad track, where he dismisses the
cab, walks to a high bank, and launches himself before an oncoming train. Before the
story ends and Paul jumps, he takes one of the red flowers he has been wearing on his
In "Paul's Case," Cather created a male character whose lifestyle did not
conform to the established norms of his day. Like Gilman, Cather focused her writing
gender and sexuality. Cather on the other hand restrained herself from overtly soliciting
her own alternative lifestyle to her writing public by adopting a female narrator like that
expressing her political concern for the confined role of men and women in society.
After examining both of these touchstone texts of Cather and Gilman, the writing styles
of both authors demonstrate how each of them shared a similar sexuo-political agenda
but why each of them chose a unique writing platform in order to address them.
26
1850-1930
During the First Wave of Feminism in America, women writers and political
activists, such as Gilman, Sanger, Addams and Cather, constructed the women's
liberation movement based on gender equality, which women of the Second Wave used
as a backbone to address gender related issues in the latter part of this century. First
Wavers created bodies of written work that primarily focused on arguments for equal
women and men as a factor in social evolution. They also produced written arguments
for the right to birth control among women by working to remove its negative social
stigma and advocating it as a means for women to possess absolute control of their lives
and their bodies; thus it was seen as a route to women's complete liberation. Sanger
accomplished this feat only after having published a compilation of horrifying real life
childbirth/rearing process. Branching off into other directions, First Wavers re-
evaluated the notion of "Democracy" arguing that its actual practice was inconsistent
positive factor in the liberation of women because it recognized women apart from the
home, the family and social claims, all of which placed pressures upon females that
resulted in them having a lower self-image than men. In a tactful yet brief essay she
wrote while working as an editor for McClure's, Cather described instances where art
27
and life unite to explore the social construction of their surroundings, which she referred
to as "escapism." The example she gave was the commitment of 15th century
Southwestern Indian women, who decorated their water jars, carried them up to nearby
streams without even knowing if water was there, to illustrate her idea. Cather also
jobs in order to gather their creative writing materials. She saw their "exceptionalness"
as "a willingness to pay the cost instead of being paid for it" (24). In both instances,
Cather illustrated how "escapism" could be used personally to incite one's imagination
and channel it resourcefully without entirely allowing social influences affect one's
the early part of the 20th century which also laid the groundwork for the Second Wavers
by the vast majority of critics. In Women & Economics (1898), subtitled "Study of the
Economic Relation between Men and Women as a Factor in Social Evolution," she
stated that the fundamental concern for women was work. "Her views on the place and
future of women were sought, commented upon, and avidly discussed in this country
and Europe"(Degler Vi). 4 Carl Degler's 1956 American Quarterly essay "inaugurated
the revival of interest in Gilman's work, and in 1966, Degler brought forth a reprinting
the 1966 Torchbook Edition that "in the first two decades of the twentieth century her
books ran through numerous editions and were translated into half a dozen foreign
28
scholarly journals alike, and as a paid lecturer, she was in great demand in the United
States, England and on the continent.6 On June 8, 1899, The Nation went so far as to
pronounce Women & Economics as "the most significant utterance on the subject [of
women] since Mill's Subjection of Woman" Nation 443). However, since Gilman
wrote very little that was directly concerned with the achievement of the issue of
suffrage, her work possibly was lost from sight because the minds of Americans at the
turn of the century were completely taken up with the struggle for the vote.
Nonetheless, what Gilman's W & E uniquely addresses is that the vote was only a
peripheral part of the revolution she both prophesized and advanced for women.
Moreover, her social theory received a much different reception than her controversial
short story "The Yellow Wallpaper." Why were her economic treatises socially
acceptable yet her gender related literary endeavors ridiculed so heavily? Was this
consequence Gilman suffered a result of coming too close to the real truth of what goes
Basing her thesis squarely on the "natural tendency of any function to increase
in power by use," (58) and on the genetic transmission of these adaptations, Gilman
charts the history of humankind from primal homogeneity to the point when "sex
distinction" had become morbid and debilitating(33). She is referring here to the notion
of cultural conditioning and the genetic determinism based upon this notion that
negatively affected women, and benefited men. According to Gilman, the restrictive
life forced upon women by the "sexuo-economic relation" (37) has made them into
what amounts to "a degenerate species specializing in sex functions"(39). The "male of
29
our species," on the other hand, "has become human, far more than male"(43). Gilman
desired to ground her polemic in biology, leading her to portray cultural conditioning as
genetic determinism. The only reason the female has not withered away completely is
that each "girl child inherits from her father a certain increasing percentage of human
male/human genes alone "has saved us from such a female as the gypsy moth"(70).
Gilman's allusion to the gypsy moth relates a woman's nature to the transformed
attract male gypsy moths to multiply at a rapid rate. Gilman defines historical women,
as opposed to the essential woman, as deviations from the male, "who is a far more
normal animal than the female of his species"(43). By encroaching on the freedoms of
the woman to the point of reducing her to a state of dependency, man assumed the
superior position of provider. "He was not only compelled to serve her needs, but to
fulfill in his own person the thwarted uses of maternity. He became, and has remained,
a sort of man-mother,"(125) who nurtures his child (read: woman) into a state of
complete dependency based upon his preconceived concept of "wife" and/or "mother."
approach to maternity that has had adverse effects on both women and men, and thus
makes the question of what an ideal human being should be like problematic. Deemed
a leading feminist in her own time, Gilman, ironically, repudiated the term feminist
when it came into use in her later years. Rather, she called herself a humanist. "Her
world was masculinist, men having usurped human traits as their own, and Gilman
wanted to restore an equal gender balance, to emancipate women from `house service'
30
service, Gilman believed that women could then serve in an industrial society and thus
benefit the world as equals to men. Women needed to tackle their challenge with their
household responsibilities of rearing children, however, before they could enter the
workforce. Someone needed to focus First Wave efforts there first for any real change
could begin.
Another female theorist who lived in America at the turn of the century and who
development of women was Margaret Sanger. Her route however was through birth
control;7 she professed that pregnancy perpetuated the poverty of the family and forced
women into solitary confinement within the household. Parallel to Gilman's Women &
Economics in their vital concern for the liberation of women, Sanger's social treatises
of the 1920s, The Pivot of Civilization (1922) and Motherhood in Bondage (1928),
focus on how women must gain control of their lives and their bodies through birth
control in order to free themselves from the control of their husbands and their doctors.
In The Pivot of Civilization, Sanger defended her work in the Birth Control
League, while addressing criticisms of her passion for more order and awareness
through what they called "Birth Control" or "the idea of modern scientific
contraception"( 12). Rebutting her critics, she demanded that, "Birth Control, therefore,
means not merely the limitation of births, but the application of intelligent guidance
over the reproductive power. It means the substitution of reason and intelligence for the
blind play of instinct"(13). During this time, Sanger notes the league was criticized for
31
the use of the term "Birth Control" which she saw as "guidance, direction,
foresight"( 12- 13). She attacked the "indifference of the intellectual leaders" who for
centuries "have preached the doctrine of glorious and divine fertility" where "children
brought into this world by unwilling mothers suffer an initial handicap that cannot be
measured by cold statistics"(15-17). It is interesting to note here that in her 1928 book
mentioned earlier, Motherhood in Bondage, Sanger provides her readers with a glimpse
of such cold statistics that will be discussed later in this chapter. "For centuries, official
moralists, priests, clergymen and teachers, statesmen and politicians have preached the
doctrine of glorious and divine fertility" while they remain "the staunching adherents in
their own lives of celibacy and non-fertility"(17-18). Sanger directed her Birth Control
More blatant and directed by the end of her treatise, Sanger purported that "the great
central problem, and one which must be taken first, is the abolition of the shame and
fear of sex"(271).
compiled by Sanger from letters sent her by mothers from all parts of the United States
and Canada. These letters "voice," as Sanger notes in her introduction to Motherhood,
"desperate appeals for deliverance from the bondage of enforced maternity"(xi). For
them, Sanger saw herself as a "symbol of deliverance" from their enslaved womanhood
32
"extending help denied them by their husbands, priests, physicians or their neighbors"
Sanger forewarned her readers: "repetition the readers will find, but significant
repetition" that "builds up the unity of this tragic communal experience"(xii). Sanger
offered the American public a gruesome look at the personal lives of many unhappy
mothers in detailed letters and statistics that summarized their horrifying experiences. In
her introduction, it was clearly evident that she grappled with objectifying women in
this manner for the public's review. She notes "an easy and even a pleasant task is it to
reduce human problems to numerical figures in black and white on charts and graphs,
individual lives" (xiii). More to the point, a subject cannot be reduced to an object with
a completely predictable pattern, and Sanger wanted her readers to know she was
concerned with the individual. "Yet life can only be lived by the individual; almost
invariably the individual refuses to conform to the theories and classifications of the
statistician"(xiii).8 After acknowledging her respect for the individual, she reported that
"of all the varieties of experience and humiliation recorded, a definite unity
emerges"(xiv).
It is unfortunate that the unity Sanger noticed can be identified as multiple women
Sanger of the dangers affiliated with childbirth and childrearing, so that she organized
33
for publication the previously discussed two books detailing the devastating personal
losses that had survived. Meanwhile, other women without children, and daughters
who still lived at home, hurdled obstacles also in order to liberate themselves from the
bondage of their family obligations that kept them linked to the household too. The
First Wavers attacked this area of concern for women because their mission included
In her argument for the liberation of single women, Jane Addams presented
various scenarios where the present form of "Democracy" was in place to impel her
social obligations involving in each instance a new line of conduct. The design for this
redefinition situated the responsibility of this task with her readers in order for them to
question their existing notion of "Democracy."9 She remarked in her opening chapter
of Democracy and Social Ethics(1907), "no attempt is made to reach a conclusion, nor
to offer advice beyond the assumption that the cure for the ills of Democracy is more
notion of "Democracy" she provided was how "the individual often sacrifices the
energy, which should legitimately go into the fulfillment of personal and family claims,
into what he considers the higher claim" that occurs whenever "daughters undertake
work lying quite outside of traditional and family interests"(73). They are met with
opposition. "These parents insist that the girl is carried away by a foolish enthusiasm,
34
that she is in search of a career, that she is restless and does not know what she
wants"(73). Addams contended the parents believe that, at the cost of the family, the
daughter was unsure of herself, needed unjust personal fulfillment, and only on a whim.
"She was setting up her own will against that of her family's for selfish ends" and "her
assumed that this was an overbearing family claim on the daughter because "for so
many hundreds of years women have had no larger interests, no participation in the
affairs lying quite outside personal and family claims"(74). Furthermore, "it is always
difficult for the family to regard the daughter otherwise than as a family
possession"(82). Comparing her to her career-minded brother, her parents assumed she
was uninteresting and dumb. Along with her familial obligations, the daughter was an
Addams saw that "modern education recognizes woman quite apart from family or
society claims, and gives her the training which for many years has been deemed
successful for highly developing a man's individuality and freeing his powers for
of "social claims" and "family claims" that is in conflict with her personal growth
outside of this web. "The result is an unhappy woman, whose heart is consumed by vain
regrets and desires"(86). Reminding Victorian America of its selfishness with regard to
its treatment of the daughter, Addams insisted that a daughter's own individual needs
were not significant because the responsibility was not to herself but to the family's
success, and that this maltreatment of her only perpetuated more weak, dependent
women. Because the family unit refused to waive their selfishness to balance the
35
personal respect that benefited the son with their daughter's needs, America showed
their unwillingness to accept women on their own without men and away from the
home. Women, who like Cather, chose not to get married were forced to consider
alternative ways in order to express their desire for life. Consequently, some chose to
comparison to Gilman, Sanger and Addams, did however write a brief essay entitled,
theoretical content. In it, Cather demonstrates the multifaceted usefulness of "a new
term in criticism: the Art of `Escape.' Her initial questions were: "Isn't the phrase
tautological? What has art ever been but escape?"(18). Her answer: "When the world is
in a bad way, we are told, it is the business of the composer and the poet to devote
himself to propaganda and fan the flames of indignation"(18). As the mind mulls over
the term Escape, "implying an evasion of duty, something like the behavior of a
poltroon," the term may at first glance appear negative, but it is actually a rhetorical tool
utilized by people, artists, writers, etc. to express themselves within their surroundings.
Cather gives the example of Southwestern Indian women, before European civilization
had ever come to America, who painted geometrical patterns on the jars in which they
carried water up from the streams, whenever there was water to collect, that is: "These
people lived under the perpetual threat of drought and famine [yet] they often shaped
their graceful cooking pots when they had nothing to cook in them"(19). Cather's
36
reasoning concerning their curious behavior was that "they sprang from an
"his loyalty to a cause"(20). The unusual behavior of the Southwestern Indian women
proved their dedication to the mission of shaping beautiful pottery to cook in with little
In this same essay, Cather also described her experience when she first lived in
New York and was on the editorial staff of a magazine, how she became "disillusioned
about social workers and reformers" "when they brought in an article on fire-trap
tenements or sweat-shop labor apologetically explained that they were making these
investigations `to collect material for fiction "'(23 -24). Cather could not believe that
"any honest welfare worker, or any honest novelist, went to work in this way"(24).
After further discussion, she came to their reason. "Their exceptionalness, oftener than
not, comes not from a superior endowment, but from a deeper purpose, and a
willingness to pay the cost instead of being paid for it"(24). Then she could relate
because she also possessed unquenchable personal missions. "Since poets and novelists
do not speak in symbols or a special language, but in the plain speech which all men use
and all men may, after some fashion, read," Cather speculated, "they are told that their
first concern should be to cry out against social justice. This, of course, writers have
always done ... This seems to be the writer's natural way of looking at the suffering of
the world"(22). Both of these examples explore the mysterious connection between art
and life. Is this what she was attempting in the depiction of her effeminate character
Paul?
37
During the First Wave of Feminism in America women writers and political
activists constructed the women's liberation movement based on gender equality. They
created bodies of written work that primarily focused on arguments for equal treatment
of both genders based upon examining, as Gilman first referred to in Women &
evolution. First Wavers also produced written arguments for the right to birth control
among women by working to remove its negative social stigma and advocating it as a
means for women to possess absolute control of their lives and their bodies. First Waver
Margaret Sanger accomplished this feat only after having published a compilation of
horrifying real life letters written by other women about their experiences during the
childbirth/rearing process. Branching off into other concerns for women during the
First Wave, women such as Jane Addams, viewed modern education as a positive factor
in the liberation of women because it recognized women apart from the home, the
family and social claims, all of which placed pressures upon females. While some
political activists pinpointed for women their challenges in social evolution toward
personal liberation, other women writers, such as Cather and Gilman, found alternative
literary journeys that tested established gender roles, and caused people to reconsider
1960 -1990
The Second Wave began with a new intensity in many societies in the degree of
reflection given to gender relations. "The political movements that came into being in
the 1960s meant that a radical questioning of gender roles was being carried out not
only by isolated scholars or marginalized groups, but in front of and with the attention
institutions worldwide" (Nicholson 1). Two different movements in America during this
time shaped this change. The Women's Rights Movement, which "drew on the
dissatisfaction felt by many middle class housewives with their lot as housewives" led
women into the paid labor force. Secondly, The Women's Liberation Movement
encouraged "the more theoretical works of the second wave" that "explained the origins
of women's oppression and the means by which it has been sustained over
time"(Nicholson 2). They generated explanations that accounted for the fundamentality
of women's oppression and the economic barriers women faced. While in the 1960s
some women writers, such as Betty Friedan, looked inward for the solution to women's
social challenges in America, other writers like Mary Ellmann and Tillie Olsen,
broadened the scope of the 1960s discussion on gender and sexuality by speculating on
how established gender roles have resulted in an unequal partnership between women
and men. Their literary contributions opened the way for the assessment of and
39
appreciation for the individual voice of the female gender that women writers soon
In the 1960s, a trend in literature written by women about women directed the
that ha[d] no name," Friedan determined, was "the problem [that] lay buried, unspoken,
for many years in the minds of American women"(11). In short, the problems these
women encountered stemmed from their own insecurities, and not any outside force."
"If a woman had a problem in the 1950's and 1960's, she knew that something must be
wrong with her marriage, or with herself '(14, my emphasis). Fortunately, individual
women struggled toward developing a discourse about their unsettled feelings and
gradually they determined "that the problem that has no name was shared by countless
women in America"(15). These countless women, she referred to, the majority of
whom were white, represented the populace of women who could afford to stay home
in their domestic settings. Other poorer and colored women had no choice but to work
and financially support their family and could only imagine the life of a suburban
housewife, while they changed bed sheets and scrubbed floors. Friedan explained, in
her point of view, why it was so difficult for anyone to understand how suburban
The suburban housewife, therefore, became the envy of other women when she reached
Furthermore, becoming envied in this fashion characterized the high point in the
evolution of a "real" American woman. Even if there were some romance to it, if this
were the dream life so many women around the world were desiring, then how could a
doctor like Mitchell have been so popular, when his income was based on the misery of
this exact group of women?12 Friedan also noted that a Newsweek article declared,
"She is dissatisfied with a lot that women of other lands can only dream of ...From the
beginning of time, the female cycle has defined and confined woman's role"(19).13 In
this article, the author assumes that simply because things are more treacherous in
foreign lands that women in America should be content with their own country's form
of domestic torture. Unlike another outspoken French feminist of the period, Simone de
Beauvoir, whom Friedan interviewed, Friedan did not advocate changing the system in
America, but rather simply leaving the system intact and allowing women to enter the
workforce with the same career opportunities as men to achieve the highest paid
positions. Friedan paved the way for future speculation on women's involvement in
American society and their evolution in it as well by starting such organizations as the
the only life choice for women. De Beauvoir, on the other hand, adopted a more radical
approach and believed that the entire system, including the institution of marriage and
A decade later Friedan would find herself interviewing France's most influential
feminist theorist, Simone de Beauvoir,14 at her residence with two interpreters in Paris
41
and discussing these issues which had caused Friedan to believe that the feminist
movement was at an ideological standstill, and left her perplexed. In Friedan's eyes,
gender issues had changed only minimally, with women still subordinate to men.
Women, to Friedan, were still the nurses and men the doctors; women were still the
secretaries and men their bosses. Consequently, she sought de Beauvoir's guidance
with a "feeling that someone must know the right answer, someone must know for sure
that all the women who had thrown away those old misleading maps were heading in
the right direction, someone must see more clearly"(Friedan, 1975, 391). What she
interpreted from her personal interview was that de Beauvoir had been "professing
intellectual heroine of our history" who she thought believed that "one must simply
destroy the system"(392). This solution seemed unrealistic to Friedan because so many
women, including de Beauvoir who shared her life with Jean Paul Sartre, the father of
would succeed faster with men on their side and miscalculated de Beauvoir's view on
gender relations. She reflected after her interview with de Beauvoir and wrote, "When
one has lived a whole life in such dependence upon a man as she has-and by flaunting
the absence of legal sanction, made a stronger bond than others do in ordinary
marriage-how could she then advocate that other women renounce the very need to
love and be loved by a man"(393). Friedan wondered why de Beauvoir resented her
own position in the role she played in her personal life with Sartre, and so her
arguments focused on eliminating all relationships with men? De Beauvoir may not
42
have felt insubordinate to Sartre but Friedan inferred from their meeting that quite
possibly she did. The level of communication between the two women expressed
possibly the medium of communication used to tackle such complexities about gender
and sexuality served as an obstacle because of its own restrictions. Significant to their
discussion, de Beauvoir and Friedan discussed various topics about gender and
sexuality and most definitely held distinct views on each and expressed them
forthrightly.
attached to the value of housework. Yet de Beauvoir disagreed altogether claiming that
"it keeps to the idea of women at home, and I'm very much against that"(400). Friedan
rebutted by claiming that "I think you tackle the question of sex by tackling equality,
Beauvoir believed that a woman would only encounter personal freedom "in a world of
equality" but "while it is not equal she takes a big risk"(405). Even in sex, Friedan
pointed out what de Beauvoir had earlier posited in The Second Sex, that "a woman
feels debased in sex because she has the underneath position"(405). They agreed that
"it is not sex that reduces women; it is society" but that "sex becomes the symbol of
what society does" so that "when we change society, we can choose our
sexuality"(405). De Beauvoir had also directed her political agenda onto class
inequality among women while Friedan was only interested in attaining the right for
authority. Thus, from her interview with de Beauvoir, Friedan developed her own
43
sense of existentialism toward the liberation of women that was fundamentally different
from that of de Beauvoir. "I had learned my own existentialism from her," Friedan
wrote. "It was The Second Sex that introduced me to that approach to reality and
ideology and led me to whatever original analysis of women's existence I have been
able to contribute" (Friedan 391). She had located her own existential authority within
herself. Friedan realized that, "we need and can trust no other authority than our own
personal truth" (Friedan 394). The significance of personal liberation had therefore
topic of confinement and women in her chapter entitled, "Feminine Stereotypes," where
opinion, "this natural law, repealed in the late nineteenth century, became then a social
axiom instead. The sequence illustrates, in turn, a law of change: when nature ceases
to enforce conditions to which the majority are accustomed or even devoted, these
While Ellmann agreed with society's replacement of manual labor with machinery,
Cather resisted the implication of such, a possible sign of her own inability to accept
difference or social change, and specifically with regard to gender distributed tasks.15
44
Cather saw that this type of lifestyle allowed for women to work with men respectively
outside of the home. Cather envisioned the possibility of balance in the family because
in an agricultural family, women may have performed different duties from men, but
everyone shared in the overall preservation of the family unit. In the New Order women
were left confined to the home, whereas men sought work outside the home and
Then Ellmann maintained how extreme efforts were exhausted during the
nineteenth century in the continuation of the feminine stereotype of confinement, and its
desirable"(89). Socially, Ellmann saw that women strove in their perfection of their
confinement roles and that they perfected this confinement in their allotted lifestyles.
"The domestic functions which are strenuously urged upon American women who are
not yet involved in them are precisely the sources of complaint against the women who
are. Many perform these functions too well, and perfection is as risible as
confinement: most often, it is noticed when the man's theoretic, artistic or spiritual
capacity is at issue"(91). As long as women stick to their confinement role, then the
current establishment with the opposite genders in effect continues. "Women are
incapable of grasping subtle principles of conduct, large aspirations, bold errors, grand
designs. This is a forgivable limitation as long as they shut their mouths and chill the
45
beer. But unfortunately, many tend to form, and then to express, narrow and hostile
opinions of masculine projects, and some may even prevent their realization"(9 1).
Ellmann concluded that, at times, women's role could be read as a humble slave with
limited tasks that only supplied assistance to their men or worked intentionally against
them. Personal liberation of women, then, also included being confident in their
interpersonal communication and not with their beliefs concealed from other people.
The absence of women's voices prevented the range of individual freedom between men
and women in becoming clear and equal. Eliminating the silence of women too became
In her 1965 book entitled Silences,16 Tillie Olsen observed "the silences I speak
of here are unnatural: the unnatural thwarting of what struggles to come into being, but
cannot"(6). She referred to the struggle women have encountered while attempting to
establish a literary voice for themselves, that has historically been a virtue ascribed only
to men. "The power and the need to create, over and beyond reproduction, is native in
both women and men. Where the gifted among women, (and men) have remained
mute, or have never attained full capacity, it is because of circumstances, inner or outer,
which oppose the needs of creation"(16-17 Olsen's emphasis). Women dedicated and
surrendered their lives to benefit others and have been traditionally conditioned to put
the needs of others first. Being denied a full writing agenda, Olsen believed, has
imprisoned women's creative abilities "lost by unnatural silences" (21). From this
perspective, the context in which Olsen employed "unnatural" implies that the writing
talents of women who desired to freely compose, like Cather and Gilman, were socially
restrained because of male domination within the major writing arenas, so that it is
46
impossible to retrieve their lost passions. Here, Olsen underestimated the power of
reticence within these texts that Cather has been recognized for, and she neglected to
consider the historical element of these texts significant to their writing styles that
Gilman both had unique and cutting edge writing styles for their age.
Although some women desired arriving at unified action with other women, and
although some women recognized the concept of strength in numbers, individuality and
difference became a central issue within discourses regarding gender and sexuality in
the 1970's. As early as 1971, Elaine Showalter had advocated the study of women
writers as a group but with common sense. "Women writers should not be studied as a
distinct group on the assumption that they write alike, or even display stylistic
resemblance's distinctively feminine"(32). She cautioned readers and critics who have
stereotypes that have confined all women to possessing only a "feminine" style or
the economics of their relation to the literary marketplace; the effects of social and
stereotypes of the woman writer and restrictions of her artistic autonomy" (32).
female authors sent out to their audience, Showalter understood that women, because of
47
their place within society and its economic structure, could have only been grouped
message. Furthermore, Showalter believed that some women may undeniably possess
common interests, but the individual voice should not be taken for granted or be denied,
especially in a writing environment. Too much collectivism denies room for the
without denying the individual difference among women and their writing. Yet she
When Gayle Rubin published "The Traffic in Women: Notes on the `Political
Economy' of Sex" for the first time in 1975, the feminist focus on the "sex/gender
system" switched from being negative to the advancement of women toward developing
theories that were not grounded in biology, as the central factor in the oppression of
women. This article expanded the discussion of gender and sexuality as well as the
and claimed that the theorizing it did about women was too narrow: patriarchy. She
also noted that the social whole encompasses at least three domains: the political, the
economic and the sexual-and the first two cannot be discussed in the absence of the
third. While Marx had developed a powerful theory of the economic and the political,
what was also needed was an investigation into the domain of sexuality, or as Rubin
"patriarchy," as the latter seemed limited not only to one form of "the sex/gender
system" but even to one form of women's oppression. For this reason, Rubin turned to
Levi-Strauss, who had argued that the exchange of women made possible the institution
48
of kinship, and for early societies organized around kinship, the construction of society
itself. These insights into Levi-Strauss' ideas explained how, if the exchange of women
were necessary for the construction of kinship, what also would be required would be
the cultural elaboration of sexual differences into gender differences, a societal demand
for heterosexuality and a prohibition against alternative lifestyles within the kinship
group. 17 In her early Second Wave statement, Rubin accounted for the very
construction of gender, its ties to heterosexuality and the incest taboo. "Individuals are
gendered as opposites who are sexually desirable to the others outside their kinship
group in order that marriage be guaranteed, and so thus this social structure reproduced"
(Nicholson 40). She also wrote, "gender is a socially imposed division of the sexes. It
is a product of the social relations of sexuality. Kinship systems rest upon marriage.
They therefore transform males and females into `men' and `women,' each an
incomplete half which can only find wholeness when united with the other" (40).
Further she established that "the idea that men and women are more different from one
another than either is from anything else must come from somewhere other than
nature"(40). On one hand, she recognized a difference and variation of traits in women
and men, and on the other, an overlapping existence of similarities that men and women
possess yet have been forced to repress for the preservation of a binary, heterosexual
reasons why Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" has only been recently discovered
within American literature. In 1973, with the expansion of the women's movement,
The Feminist Press resurfaced Gilman's short story in a tiny paperback edition with an
49
masterpiece" that "for almost fifty years has been overlooked, as has its author, one of
the most commanding feminists of her time" (37). Significant to the current discussion
that, if female authors like Gilman created negative portrayals of the established
publishers at the cost of their fame. Furthermore, Hedges claimed, "No one seems to
have made the connection between insanity and the sex, or the sex role of the victim, no
one explored the story's implications for male-female relationships in the nineteenth
century" (41). Yet the message in Gilman's story rests within these relationships.
Within a few years, it became evident that Hedges' efforts opened the door for
more detailed accounts of how the medical field betrayed women. For instance, The
Horrors of the Half-Known Life (1976) and For Her Own Good (1979) were published
and documented the sexuo-economic politics of the medical field and from which
women like Gilman suffered at the turn of the century in America. In one of the
America. "Doctors and obstetricians formulated and inspired two methods for the
elimination of the midwife: propaganda and legislation"(B-B 63). For instance, in the
Flexner Report of 1910, Barker-Benfield noted that "[physicians] set out to make
potential mothers fear midwives by deeming them hopelessly dirty, ignorant and
incompetent, relics of a barbaric past"(B-B 63). Through this propaganda they were
50
able to eliminate the midwife's market by persuading women that birth was so
dangerous that they had to have obstetricians. "Since birth was unnatural, it was liable
to affect the `patient's' health in any number of unpredictable ways, with which only a
fully trained expert was qualified to cope"(B-B 63). Pertaining to legal action and the
outraged" Dr. George Kosmak who "refused to train [midwives] in his hospital, and
joined him in his attack: "One further line of attack on midwives was their
investigation and prosecution by the Legal Bureau of the Medical Society of the County
of New York. Young presents 99 cases of `criminal practice,' the bald outline of which
"developed concurrently with castration (which Mitchell also performed)" and that was
Barker-Benfield was not the only author who, during this decade, ridiculed the medical
practices at the turn of the century and how they were used against women in order to
Ehrenreich and Deidre English published their For Her Own Good reporting on the past
"150 years of the experts' advice to women" and investigated the results of such
"expertise." In the first part of their book they traced the rise of the "psychomedical
experts," who emphasized medicine as their paradigm for professional authority. Then,
in the second section of their treatise, Ehrenreich and English examined how these
experts used their authority to determine women's domestic activities. Lastly, they
drew out the decline of this "romanticism" between these doctors and the women of
Introducing this romantic affair between these middle to upper class women and
their doctors, Ehrenreich & English initially alert their readers to its danger by pointing
out that "the experts wooed their female constituency, promising the `right' and
scientific way to live, and women responded-most eagerly in the upper and middle
classes, more slowly among the poor-with dependency and trust"(4). Because the
wealthier women could afford the money to spend on such medical care, they were
offered the opportunity to try out various medical techniques. Lower class women, in
this instance, did not have the funds to seek out such medical attention; they could not
afford to lay up in the bed, eat expensive fatty foods and miss work for a lengthy
duration. Further, the experts drained more than the pockets of their wealthy female
patients. "It was never an equal relationship, for the experts' authority rested on the
English are referring here to the Woman Question that arose during the historical
52
masculinist point of view the Woman Question was a problem of control: Woman had
solved" (4). Ehrenreich and English discussed this period of time as the Old Order as
opposed to the New Order, "when science was a fresh and liberating force, when
women began to push out into an unknown world, and the romance between women
and the experts began"(5). Physicians, like Mitchell, dominated the scene in finding the
Gilman, Jane Addams, and so many others: What is woman's true nature? And what,
in an industrialized world which no longer honored women's traditional skills, was she
to do?" (4). During this time, Mitchell's rest cure began being practiced in the upper
and middle class with the poor showing most resistance toward his diagnoses. "The
Old Order is gynocentric: the skills and work of women are indispensable to survival.
Woman is always subordinate, but she is far from being a helpless dependent"(8, E &
E's emphasis). With the social transformation to industrialized society, the triumph of
the Market economy dictated the lives of everyone, and Capitalism replaced the
"natural economy" of the Old Order. Ehrenreich & English concur, "it was the end of
the gynocentric order," and they found Capitalism to blame (11). Perhaps Cather
performed different duties than the men, everyone shared in the responsibility of the
53
financial success of the household, and women were not confined entirely to the home,
science offered to women at the turn of the century in America at first appealed to those
who could afford a new life style. Women saw this opportunity as a risk worth taking,
and they somehow trusted the men who summoned their support. "Science had once
attacked entrenched authority, but the new scientific expert himself became an
authority" (E & E 28). This transformation established a trusting network among the
medical experts, the husbands and their wives who underwent any of their treatments,
because it was a chance to leave the old outdated pseudo-medical regime behind and
forge on to the next age of science. "This was the basis of the `romance' between
women and the new experts: science had been on the side of progress and freedom. To
ignore the dictates of science was surely to remain in the `dark ages'; to follow them
was to join the forward rush of history"(29). Gilman was one of these women who
believed in the progressiveness of science and its representative experts, but only for a
short while. Ehrenreich & English presented the most detailed synopsis of the events
leading up to and following the rest cure treatment that Gilman suffered having been
After Gilman collapsed with a "nervous disorder," a friend of her mother's lent
her one hundred dollars to seek out "the greatest nerve specialist in the country," who
was Dr. S. Weir Mitchell. At this point in his career, he was renowned for his treatment
of female nervous disorders that had led to a marked alteration of character, and he was
`had become colossal "'(101). Yet Gilman approached Mitchell "with [the] `utmost
confidence"'(101) and reported to him a complete history of her own case. She told
him how her sickness vanished when she was away from her home, her husband and her
child, and returned as soon as she came back to them. Yet he dismissed her "prepared
Live as domestic a life as possible. Have your child with you all the
time. (Be it remarked that if I did but dress the baby it left me shaking
and crying-certainly far from a healthy companionship for her, to say
nothing of the effect on me.) Lie down an hour after each meal. Have
but two hours intellectual life a day. And never touch pen, brush or
pencil as long as you live. (E &E 102)
After "some months" of attempting to follow his orders "to the letter," the result in her
own words was that "I came perilously close to losing my mind. The mental agony
grew so unbearable that I would sit blankly moving my head from side to side ... I
would crawl into remote closets and under beds-to hide from the grinding pressure of
that distress (E & E 102). The romance of forging into a new scientific way of life had
died, and Gilman had resolved that she did not want to be married anymore; she wanted
to be an activist and a writer. Three years later, "The Yellow Wallpaper" was published
method of treatment.
Gilman, were finding themselves in a new position of dependency on the male medical
profession was consolidating its monopoly over healing"(102). Husbands paid for their
55
wives to be tortured, and women were brainwashed into contributing to this industry by
trusting these medical experts who really were misleading them. Ehrenreich and
English, along with Barker-Benfield, adopted a historical point of view toward the
social construction of the oppression of women, then they thoroughly critiqued the
medical industry that authorized themselves to provide medical treatments that did not
help the women who trusted them. Ehrenreich, English and Barker-Benfield also
specifically attacked medical experts like Mitchell who treated women, like Gilman and
Addams who suffered from nervousness, and prescribed for them strange treatments
that evidenced a gender bias in the diagnoses for men and women. Any woman who
dared to step outside these confines, like Gilman did, might have ended up suffering for
having thought for herself, or for having chosen an alternative lifestyle. The medical
experts, however, were not the only ones on the attack for anyone who stepped outside
As literary critics examined Cather's lifestyle, from the time she was writing at
the turn of the century until the 1970s, they displayed in their critiques, subtle
innuendoes about the strange secrecy of her life and her "psychology." Nonetheless,
despite the new exploration into feminist issues, it was not until 1975 that a critic, Jane
Rule, pointed out that Cather's alternative lifestyle may have meant she was indeed a
lesbian. Prior to this point Cather critics had attacked her credibility as a writer, because
of the reticence within her writing, but none so boldly deemed her a gay writer until
Rule. "What they want[ed] out in the light of day," Rule determined, "[wa]s her
emotional and erotic preference for women, and, if they [could] not have irrefutable
biographical facts or [could] not use them in print, they [would] distort their reading of
56
her fiction to make their discrediting point"(Rule 76). Here she is referring to the three
male critics, James Shroeter, Lionel Trilling, and John H. Randall III, who all implied
from their evaluation of Cather that she could not write reliably about heterosexual
relations because of her personal eccentricity. As negative as they were toward her
writing, they only made, as Rule posited, "grossly inaccurate critical generalizations"
Once other critics learned that Cather may have been secretly a lesbian, they
immediately turned to her complete body of work and began investigating each piece
for signs of her alternative lifestyle, more specifically her lesbianism. For example,
later in 1975, Larry Rubin wrote an article entitled, "The Homosexual Motif in Willa
Cather's `Paul's Case."' In it, he first established how "with the virtual lifting of social
taboos in the discussion of sex in recent years-a new freedom reflected both in the
creation of literature and in its analysis-we have been getting some highly evocative
American literature"(127). What was once invisible was now obvious, especially
regarding literature that possessed underdeveloped issues about gender and sexuality.
Further, he posited that "particularly in the area of homosexuality, this newly unfettered
approach to the libidinous urges of various literary characters has thrown the light of
Freud upon certain dark and previously unmentionable aspects of the psychological
motivation of those characters and even of the overall vision of the authors
involved"( 127). These well-known literary authors concealed their own lifestyle yet
alluded to it, and may have possibly even lived through the literary characters they
created. Of all these classic American authors, Cather and Paul in "Paul's Case" was
57
one couple Rubin felt worthwhile investigating for such traces of similarities between
Rubin begins his critical examination of the hidden homosexual elements within
"Paul's Case" by asking, "What, then, are the clues with which Cather has been so
lavish?"(129). Rubin examined Paul's physical appearance for support of his premise
while he considered the actual text to further his point. "Here the most prominent
teachers; `he continually used them in a conscious, theatrical sort of way, peculiarly
early on in her story, the second paragraph of it, Rubin saw this as "one of the first links
in a growing chain of evidence of Paul's deviation from what the culture of her day
(and, to a great extent, of our own) would consider the sexual norm"(129). Some other
clues that Rubin focused on that provide evidence that she was cleverly creating a
homosexual central character was "the fact that Paul feels it necessary to keep his bottle
of violet water carefully hidden from his father [which] could almost symbolize his
sense of alienation from a society that has only contempt for what it considers
effeminacy in a young man"(129). Rubin also found notable the relationship between
the "wild San Francisco boy" from Yale and Paul, especially as the critic noticed, "the
frostiness of their parting," which Cather referred to in her story as "singularly cool,"
and which Rubin declares is a "heavily loaded phrase"(130). Albeit Cather never came
right out and stated it, "Cather [wa]s," Rubin concludes, "trying to show us the tragic
the one hand, and a narrowly `moral,' bourgeois environment, on the other"(131). In the
58
end, Paul commits suicide. Rubin correctly assesses Cather's intent when he says,
"does she have to spell it out?" Even if she wanted to, Cather could not because certain
matters were not discussed in 1905 when the original version of "Paul's Case" was
released to the public. Nonetheless, Cather's superb craftsmanship showed that she
could convey such an experience, as Rubin determined, "without violating any of the
literary taboos of her time"(131). The portrayals of the characters in Gilman and
Cather's short stories, who did not abide by the established principles of the "sex/gender
Yellow Wallpaper" and "Paul's Case" and their impact upon the 1970's American
public.
style" of writing, individuality and difference among women played a significant role in
1970's discourses about gender and sexuality. The "sex/gender system" and the
America that also contributed to the social construction of gender, which resulted in
opposite genders: male and female. Meanwhile, the rebirth of Gilman's "The Yellow
of the male-dominated medical field that mistreated middle and upper class women in
their medical treatments and suppressed the practice of mid-wifery. Dr. Mitchell
became the focus of several critical attacks as the New Order replaced the Old Order
with the establishment of industrialization. The romance between women and their
physicians developed, and then ended. Also, at this time, Cather critics scrutinized her
59
life while identifying her openly as a lesbian for the first time. This new way of
analyzing her life opened for a new examination of Cather's work for their hidden
homosexual motifs. These new developments in the 1970's prepared America for the
reconstruction of the notion of gender and sexuality, and both Gilman and Cather
Why then, if Cather were gay, did she choose to create in "Paul's Case" these
literary adventures with a male protagonist and not a female Paulette one, who
underwent the same conflicts? Why did she project these complex feelings in the form
of a male, rather than a female character? These questions, rightfully asked, have
perplexed many of Cather's critics and, in the 1980s, some began to question her
credibility, as well as that of other female authors, as a result. Perhaps because of the
work of women in the 1970s who demanded the appreciation and recognition for the
individual female voice, critics in the 1980s began to question the effects of socially
constructing gender and sexuality differently. Women of color, especially, entered the
feminist platform to address their notion of gender and sexuality, which had, in the past,
been unheard. However, most women had only begun to explore this notion of
difference.
critic of the Second Wave, grappled with the lives of women writers that she felt
underdeveloped the portrayals of the lives of their heroines, although, given their own
eccentric lives, they could have done better.20 Cather is one author that French was
bothered by because "she had it all" but "did not create female characters who were
60
equally gifted"(219). French acknowledges that "it is understandable that in the area of
sex she might not have wanted to use knowledge derived from her own life: she was a
lesbian and could not, at that time, write about sexual fulfillment through a
woman"(220). In her final paragraph, French offered a coy disclaimer, "Perhaps there
are women writers I have not considered, who have granted their characters a scope
similar to their own"(229).21 Gilman is certainly one. Yet, French left her readers
hanging, her argument unproven, because she did not take into consideration women
writers, like Gilman, who forthrightly did in fact write about horrifying real-life
much negative criticism that she began her own "utopian" publication, The Forerunner,
in which to vocalize her anti-patriarchal opinions that were not acceptable for
Yet, as one of the most popular Cather critics, Sharon O'Brien pointed out,
adoption of a male point of view does not indicate "subservience to patriarchal values"
(214). While expressing her discontent with the female experience, she placed the male
consciousness on center stage bearing the onus of failing to confront the truth of their
existence. Moreover, O'Brien remarked, "Throughout her literary career, Cather was
both the writer transforming the self in art and the lesbian writer at times forced to
declared that in many ways "Paul is a male version of Willa Cather"(283), but a
"backward glance at an earlier version of herself'(110). She shares with him a passion
for the arts, a longing to escape the drab and ordinary, and a rejection of traditional
61
gender roles, which Paul expresses by abandoning his father's Horatio Alger values
maintained, that Cather "could reject the female role she found limiting only by
between the men is clear in "Paul's Case." All the while, Cather's writing agenda
broadened the allotted female writing agenda, and in fact, totally changed it forever, as
this thesis sets forth. Some critics have even evaluated the complexity in Cather's
writing agenda that they claim may be observed in what she did not write.
In her third chapter entitled "The Duplicitous Art of Willa Cather," Janis P.
interest inherent in Cather's work," because "it accorded so well with her need to find a
strategy of avoidance and suppression"(67). 22 In all that Cather was not saying, she
held a secret mission. Stout argued that, "the need fueled the theoretical affiliation that
twofold: meaningful and proper. Yet her discipline was not a disguise or a
rationalization of her neurotic need. "Each element," as Stout noted, "has its own
interest, its own importance, and its validity as an explanatory rationale for her fiction.
But they do overlap. And that, in essence, is why Cather is so difficult-much more
difficult than she has generally been regarded. Her narrative is deeply, elusively
duplicitous"(68). More pointedly, Stout resolved that "her purpose in adopting a male
persona, is not, I believe, to deny her female identity but to deny or evade the
intentional. Nonetheless, Stout admitted that "it is impossible to know, of course, but
the answer has a great deal to do with her old feelings about masculinity of art"(90).
Rather than focusing on specific female authors, as French and O'Brien did with
Cather, Nancy Hartsock questioned the materialistic critique of society they have
written. Hartsock argued that "the power of the Marxian critique of class domination
and establish "a feminist materialism." She compared a woman's experience to that of
the proletarians in Marxian theory and used this for the basis of her theoretical
explanation of the "sexual division of labor:" "Like the lives of proletarians according
to Marxian theory, women's lives make available a particular and privileged vantage
point on male supremacy, a vantage point which can ground a powerful critique of the
patriarchy"(Nicholson 217). For this reason, women must adopt a "standpoint:" "rather
than a simple dualism, it posits a duality of levels of reality, of which the deeper level or
essence both includes and explains the `surface' or appearance, and indicates the logic
by means of which the appearance inverts and distorts the deeper reality" (Nicholson
218). "The concept of a standpoint depends on the assumption that epistemology grows
in a complex and contradictory way from material life," Hartsock determined, such that
"the adoption of a standpoint exposes the real relations among human beings as
inhuman, points beyond the present, and carries a historically liberating role"(Nicholson
218). Historically, women have been confined to not only the home but to the
Like her first wave predecessors, Hartsock also noticed the difference between
women and men's experiences that make life easier for men and harder for women in a
First, women as a group work more than men. We are all familiar with
the phenomenon of the `double day' ...Second, a larger proportion of
women's labor time is devoted to the production of use-values than
men's. Only some of the goods women produce are commodities . .
.Third, women's production is structured by repetition in a different way
than men's ...women's work in housekeeping involves a repetitious
cleaning. (Nicholson 224)
This "sexual division of labor" within America's capitalistic structure creates and
and so therefore affects the power relations within the heterosexual couple. Hence, the
heterosexual bond can be analyzed as yet another social institution that forms a system
of oppression for women, an institution that was explored in the 1980s second wave
feminists, and that further identifies the entrapment female authors faced at the turn of
compulsive heterosexuality has branched off into all sections of society resulting in a
heterosexual compulsory, female writers like Cather and even Gilman have
presumptively written texts that reflect such normative conditioning, instead of voicing
their true feelings. However, when there is no language, or rather, the phallocentric
64
language you communicate with works against the construction of such emotions, then
silence results. For this reason, Rich suggests that rather than there being a simple
divide between lesbian and heterosexual women,23 all the experiences of a woman can
be located along a "lesbian continuum,"(135) a term she uses to remove some of the
fear attributed to the notion of being a lesbian because of the deeply imposed
profoundly on female experience that contradicts the assumption that all women want
and desire to marry a man. Moreover, "lesbian continuum" contradicts the historical
definition of "lesbian" and reconstructs the notion of sexuality that can be identified in
Joanna Russ justifiably inquired, what is one to do when you want to write and
you feel the world is against you (Russ 151). Russ saw that within Cather's
presentation of male characters, like Paul, evidence of her own complex sexuality lay.
Russ also purported that Cather's depictions, which she sheltered in a creative literary
fashion, masked her true feelings of sexuality from criticism of the outside world.
While deconstructing the phallic, Cather felt it more appropriate to formulate "Paul's
Case" with a male narrator so as not to have her portrayal be confused with the notion
that she was against women; Cather was a woman. Rather, she was against the feminine
writing. From this mode of critical analysis, the protagonist in Gilman's story can be
interpreted as fighting in her own way against phallocentric thinking. She could not
65
perform anymore the allotted feminine role assigned to her. She was striving to recreate
herself. Similarly, Russ arrived at this point: "so many of the other male personae of
the books Cather gave us are, in a very precious and irreplaceable way, records not of
male but of female experience, indeed of lesbian experience"(157). But was Cather
masquerading, or playing, with the ludicrous notion that these "romantic friendships"
were "pervert [ed] "(Russ 151) while people wondered? Or both? "If Willa Cather was
masquerading, it was a masquerade she returned to again and again, despite Jewett's
advice, despite reviewers' possible reactions, and despite her own belief, spoke if not
felt, that such a masquerade was silly and presumptuous"(Russ 151). How would
America at the turn of the century have reacted to a counteractive Paul in a female form
who forthrightly expressed her romantic adoration for other women? "The innocent
rightness in feelings of love for and attraction to women that Jewett and her
contemporaries enjoyed was not possible in Cather's generation; the social invention of
note here how in one generation something is considered "perverted," then the next
"innocent," especially with regard to ownership of sexuality and the discussion around
it. Indeed as Russ points out "Cather's `masquerade' was a necessity," because it
protected her from the unsure, ever-changing views of the world around her. In fact,
her "masquerade" was her shield as she strove toward personal liberation.
In her 1996 PMLA article, "'But One Expects That"': Charlotte Perkins
Gilman's `The Yellow Wallpaper' and the Shifting Light of Scholarship," Julie Bates
Dock addresses this issue. "A study of the textual, publication, and reception histories
of `The Yellow Wallpaper' demonstrates how shifts in criticism from one era to another
66
cast different light on the evidence surrounding the story"(53). In other words, when
scholars develop their scholarly approaches to a story, they reflect the era and the
textual information that is available to the critical reader. "Hedges' edition," Dock
identifies, "can justly claim to be the starting point for the renewed interest in Gilman
and her work"(53). Hedges' edition, including her forward, is the 1973 Feminist Press
edition that prompted the 1992 casebook. Dock observes, "More recent critics,
beginning with Hedges, seem to imply that `The Yellow Wallpaper' has been read
either as a horror story or as a story of sexual politics, more specifically that the late-
century later see it accurately"(59). The temporal relationship between the two eras is
what Dock discusses in her argument, and the significance of this analysis of Gilman, as
well as her story, is that it is as if through time these authorities have been decade after
decade peeling back layers of authorial tricks in order to get to some truth. My
contention is that there is no one single truth, except that temporal element that
distinguishes one generation of reception from another also demonstrates the distinctive
evolution of America's view on gender and sexuality. In her edition, Hedges assesses
that "no one seems to have made the connection between the insanity and the sex, or
sexual role, of the victim, no one explored the story's implications for male-female
Dock points out that "reviews demonstrate that the story's first readers did recognize its
not use modern terminology" (Dock 60). In a more recent article that has been
published several times and including in the casebook on Gilman, Hedges identifies the
67
"wallpaper, as the story's key metaphor, [which] has been read as inscribing the
of feminist criticism" that have analyzed for their own writing purposes, including her
Initially, authorities gave Gilman's story back to America, then they analyzed the text
itself, and how the scope of understanding it has broadened over the past 100 years
since its original publication, as if the story itself were a woman, and the protagonist in
it, ever-evolving. It should be mentioned here that, likewise, Cather's metaphorical
Although at this point of her discussion, Dock focuses on three 1899 reviews
that support her contention, she later notes that one of the best-rubbed chestnuts of
Gilman's criticism concerns the hostility Gilman faced from her contemporary
audience, especially from the male-dominated medical community (61). Dock employs
Jean Kennard to illustrate exactly why the 1899 reviewers' approaches to Gilman's
short story should not be denigrated, because to them politically, "the story of a female
writer driven mad, in part by her husband, was a horrifying subject"(60). It still is.
Moreover, Dock sees that "their comments may sometimes gloss over the radical social
commentary of the story, but the evidence indicates that they saw Gilman's feminist
message"(6). Even now more than ever, we can use Gilman's short story as a literary
68
springboard, along with her earlier critics, to see how the social position of women has
evolved. Dock saw:
While we might challenge any idea that Dock finds "truth," perhaps what these "new
finds" do generation after generation is clarify the interaction between women and
social institutions shaping gender and sexuality. In other words, the relationship is
dynamic, thus new insights keep appearing.
Dock challenges the validity of some of these gems. She noted that "even
Berman, whose article about the `unrestful cure' provides well-researched information
about Mitchell's medical contributions, repeats [Gilman's] report that Mitchell changed
his cure"(62). Dock found Berman's information based on the casebook to be false in
this respect. Dock points out that "Mitchell's published letters contain no hint that he
altered his thinking about the rest cure; on the contrary, as late as 1908 he wrote to
Andrew Carnegie that he wanted to build a hospital for `Rest Treatment for the
Poor"'(62). She continues, "far from abandoning his methods, Mitchell proposed to
extend them beyond the middle and upper classes, some sixteen years after Gilman's
story appeared"(62). Gilman would seem to be the one to know this answer, but she
reported information that was actually false. Maybe Dock puts it better when she
warns, "American literature would certainly be the poorer without `The Yellow
Wallpaper,' but an understanding of such stories and of the culture that produced them
requires careful scrutiny of assumptions made by critics and by texts and writers of the
past"(62). I guess, as the title plainly states, one should expect that.
Of the recent critics, Judith Butler presented the most sophisticated analysis of
"Paul's Case" and Cather, in general, of the recent critics. In Bodies That Matter
69
crafting of matters sexual and political," which further investigated her efforts in
Gender Trouble published in 1990. To be more specific, she studied the "crafting" of
our bodies to express a certain gender. "Not only did bodies tend to indicate a world
beyond themselves, but this movement beyond their own boundaries, a movement of
boundary itself, appeared to be quite central to what bodies `are.' I kept losing track of
the subject"(Butler ix). She criticized her own philosophical tendencies by saying that
philosophers have tendencies to "sometimes... forget that `the' body comes in
of her written determination about the "crafting" of bodies. Because of the abstractness
attached to the extension of the crafted body and the silenced discussion surrounding it,
she stumbled through her own discussion of the embodied gender. To further illustrate
she added, "one woke in the morning, perused the closet or some more open space for
the gender of choice, donned that gender for the day, and then restored the garment to
its place at night"(x). In this way, the sexual agent chooses to perform in such a routine
manner, half asleep probably in this instance, so that one questions the agent's
conscious determination of their role. "Such a willful and instrumental subject, one who
decides on its gender, is clearly not its gender from the start and fails to realize that its
gender, Butler demonstrates how "on" and "by" we actualize its perpetuation because of
social conditioning. Social agents choose to dress a gender that has already been chosen
for them, so that people act out what has already been acted upon for them.
This was not the first time that Butler linked gender with performance. In her
and Feminist Theory" published in Theatre Journal, Butler examined gender divisions
differently from one's contemporaries and from one's embodied predecessors and
successors as well"(Butler, 1988 521). Butler contends that gender is not invented by
an individual, nor is it the expression of an essential physical and psychological
of it, but which requires individual actors in order to be actualized and reproduced as
morphology as well. In this sense, Cather's fiction can be read as the foundering and
"the guise of loyalty" to the paternal law. Cather never acknowledged Paul was gay;
she carefully carved out a teenager who challenged the socially constructed gender
norms of his day, that critics have identified linked to homosexuality. Butler later
elaborated on this "guise of loyalty" and the taboos affiliated with Paul's or Cather's
own sexuality. "To read Cather's text as a lesbian text is to initiate a set of
complications that cannot be easily summarized, for the challenge takes place, often
painfully, within the very norms of heterosexuality that the text also mocks"(162). "The
introduction to schoolboy Paul in `Paul's Case' makes clear that he is a figure `under
the ban of suspension "'(162). Although Paul has not been expelled, his conduct has
been noticed as unacceptable by the school officials: "As he is called in front of the
local school authorities, his clothes are described as not quite or, rather, no longer,
fitting the body within, and this incommensurability between the body and its clothes is
Butler noted. "[This demeanor] suggests `something of the dandy about him,' and in the
`adornments,' including the Wilde-reminiscent `carnation' which `the faculty somehow
felt was not properly significant of the contrite spirit befitting a body under the ban of
unlike that usually accepted for boys. "Thinking the body as constructed demands a
rethinking of the meaning of construction itself '(xi):
Of course, the latter domain is where Paul's body dwells in his refusal to be reduced to
homosexuality," Butler correctly predicted that, "the text exceeds the text, the life of
the law exceeds the teleology of the law, enabling an erotic contestation and disruptive
repetition of its own terms"(140).
Butler also incorporated Eve Sedgwick's analysis of Paul into her discussion of
"Paul's liminal sexual and gender status." Sedgwick had posited that Paul's sexuality
could be documented as something more complex than simply male or female,
about the liminal zone in which the figure of the dandy also carries for Cather the
liminal predicament of the lesbian then," Butler contends that, "we might read `Paul'
less as a mimetic reflection of `boys at the time' than as a figure with the capacity to
convey and confound what Sedgwick has described as the passages across gender and
sexuality" (163 her emphasis). Although she speculates on "Paul's Case" as Cather's
"authorial `passing,"' in this way Butler questions and confirms Sedgwick's approach to
Paul because she agrees that he is shifting, or moving, in this passage between gender
and sexuality but not going "beyond," Cather is not depicting a "fictional
transcendence"(163). "The `ban of suspension' under which Paul appears, then, puts
into doubt to which gender and sexuality `Paul' refers, confounding a reading that
claims to `settle' the question of which vectors of sexuality Paul embodies"(163). What
results in Butler's exploration of the character of Paul and his obvious complexities is a
"transference as well as the impossibility of its resolution into any of the gendered or
questions about gender that can never be answered possibly because Cather attempted
to communicate how indefinable sexuality really is.
Rubin's 1984 article that stated "gender and sexuality represent two analytic axes that
may productively be imagined as being as distinct from each other, as, say, gender and
class, or class and race"(Sedgwick 53). Although Sedgwick "assumes that no issue of
gender would fail to be embodied through the specificity of a particular sexuality," she
argued that "there could be use in keeping the analytic axes distinct"(54) for purposes of
of interpretations of the individual, interpretations that connect the two by granting the
significance of each to the other, or the third entity, the sexender or gendrality. These
characters absorb the complexities that their authors possessed. They are in fact what
74
Cather knew. The challenge, therefore, is creating a reading that would not conceal the
effects either has on the welfare or oppressions of the individual. "The dichotomy
unstable tendency of them both, thereby allowing for more options on the platform for
discussion in the future. "An essentialism of sexual object choice is far less easy to
maintain, far more visibly incoherent, more visibly stressed and challenged at every
point in the culture, than any essentialism of gender"(Sedgwick 56). Because our
American culture has almost solidified its approach to gender and sexuality, we have
and have concealed any alternative to this hegemonic model. "Our culture's
crystallization of gay identities over the past hundred years has persistently been
structured by two conceptual impasses or incoherences, one concerning gender
definition and the other concerning sexual definition"(57). "Paul's Case" is an example
of this willingness for culture to contest these incoherences and create a performance
around them that mocks them.
way [was] peculiarly offensive in a boy." Sedgwick also discusses Cather's "certain
distinctive position of gender liminality" expressed in her attachment to Paul that in the
beginning showed she identified with him: "the identification between Paul's
pathology on the one hand and his insincerity and artificiality on the other is so
seamless that the former is to be fully evoked by the latter, through a mercilessly
specular, fixated point of view that takes his theatrical self-presentation spitefully at its
word"(64):
75
If Cather, in this story, does something to cleanse her own sexual body
of the carrion stench of Wilde's victimization, it is thus (unexpectedly)
by identifying with what seems to be Paul's sexuality not in spite of but
through its saving reabsorption in a gender-liminal (and very specifically
classed) artifice that represents at once a particular subculture and culture
itself. Cather's implicit reading here of the gendering of sex picks out
one possible path through the mazed junction at which long-residual
issues of gender and class definition intersected new turn-of-the-century
mappings of sexual choice and identification. In what I am reading as
Cather's move in `Paul's Case,' the mannish lesbian author's coming
together with the effeminate boy on the ground of a certain distinctive
position of gender liminality is also a move toward a minority gay
identity whose more effectual cleavage, whose more determining
separatism, would be that of homo/heterosexual choice rather than that
of the male/female gender. (Sedgwick 65-66, her italics, my bolding)
away from such polarizations. Once again, we see the use of forward slashes, "/" as a
dichotomizing distinguisher, for "homo/heterosexual" and "male/female" yet it is that
very forward slash, where the chord to the stage curtain hangs waiting to be pulled for
the real show to begin.
theatricality"(553). "Beyond Paul's interest in the theater and numerous allusions to it,
the story's narration incorporates a series of highly dramatized scenes in which the
shifts in Paul's actual and metaphorical roles reflect the unfolding of his `case"'(553).
In comparison, Cather's literal use of the theater in "Paul's Case," coincidental or not, is
fitting for the topic of gender and sexuality at issue in this assessment.
"The Pittsburgh half of the story is built on five such scenes: the `inquisition' at
school, Carnegie Hall, outside the Schenley Hotel, the basement of Paul's house, and
Sunday afternoon on Cordelia Street. Each scene is reinforced by theatrical
76
elements"(553). As Page analyzes Paul's story from this theatrical framework, he cites
from the story in a progression, the instances where "we see Paul off-stage, in the
dressing room, changing costume and character to be ready for his next role"(553) to
where "after the concert, Paul's theatrical role expands further"(553). Page observes
that "in the earlier scenes the theatrical metaphor is external--Paul acts his role within
the constraints of a situation he does not control--but [standing outside in the rain and
gazing into the lavish interior of the hotel] he internalizes the theatrical metaphor"(554).
Thus, he becomes not merely actor or audience but playwright. "For Paul, Cordelia
Street is not the actual stage of life but a backstage, where he does not live, but only
endures"(554). Page commented on Claude Summers argues that "the integrity of King
Lear's Cordelia contrast ironically both with Paul's weakness and with the conformist
mediocrity of his middle-class world"(554). In so doing, Page intends for Paul an
metaphoric audience and playwright, his predominant role in this first half of the story
role that someone else has written the script for him to play for the world. He is "split
up between multiple sets on which he acts"(555). However, "just as Paul donned his
costume before the concert, in New York he again assembles his `costume,' clothes that
this time fit perfectly"(555). In the Big Apple, "this is all possible because Paul has
written the script" that "allow[s] him his desired role in his imagined world"(555).
In "Paul's Case," "the [theatrical] motif offers [Cather] a means of dealing with
a difficult subject"(556). Page established that for Paul "in living out this fantasy in
New York, he successfully combines the role of playwright, actor, and audience"(556).
He continued, "In another sense, he is happy because, having found his place and
himself, he no longer has to play a part at all"(556). It is the theatrical metaphor that
Page argues provides Cather the double perspective she requires. "Through it, she can
77
portray Paul as intimately as she wants, and yet she can remain aloof, withdrawing into
the audience watching [him]"(556). From this perspective, therefore, the metaphor of
theatricality reflected the most contemporary discussions of gender and sexuality in
America.
The most recent critics have noticed that Cather masked her sexuality because in
her generation alternative lifestyles were considered perverted. Texts with male
narrators actually relay female experiences, perhaps lesbian experiences. Dock noted
that criticisms of a text, like "The Yellow Wallpaper," shift as history evolves and new
discussions develop, as if peeling back layers of a text in order to get to the truth which
the newer generation of critics have discovered, or merely "posited." These shifts in
criticism pinpoint how the social position of women has evolved in the heterosexual
hegemonic culture in America. Also during the 1990's, Butler implemented the notion
of "the crafting of characters" by authors within literary texts that result in gender
performances and which contribute to the "theatricality" toward the established gender
roles of the past. Actually, when "one does one's body," as Butler posited, one acts out a
performance and the gendering of sex; it also supports the notion of eliminating binary
opposites when constructing genders. Thus, Paul's character functions not only as an
actor but a playwright.
78
V. Conclusion.
The two literary touchstones of Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Willa Cather
examined in this thesis anchored a larger discussion of the discourse about gender and
sexuality during the First and Second Waves of feminism in America. "The Yellow
of the century in America, while Cather's "Paul's Case" reconstructed the notion of
"masculinity." Both Cather and Gilman wrote their short stories at the turn of the
century in America during the First Wave of Feminism yet they resurfaced in
discussions about gender and sexuality in the Second Wave of Feminism. Readings of
both Cather and Gilman's writings have evolved with the First and Second Waves
because their protagonists defied and undercut the established social norms enabling
them to be re-examined much after their publication date. Although their writing styles
are different, Gilman and Cather share a complex understanding of gender and sexuality
that earmark the social position of women in America which can be interpreted by the
During the First Wave of Feminism, women discussed how their ability to
reproduce contributed to unbalanced gender relations, caused middle and upper class
women to remain confined to the household, and economically dependent upon their
sickened many women and left them reliant on their physician's care as well.
Challenging this social structure, Gilman recorded her experience after being diagnosed
with neurasthenia by Dr. Mitchell, ordered to remain in bed for months while
consuming fatty foods and with no support from friends. Meanwhile, Cather expressed
79
her discontent with the social construction of gender in America by asserting a male
character that reconsidered the established norms for men and women of Victorian
America.
When the Second Wave of Feminism emerged in America, the discussions about
gender and sexuality reread these touchstone texts of Gilman and Cather as flexible
visions of reality but in different discursive contexts depending on the social time frame
in which they reviewed them. In the 1960s, the Women's Rights Movement and the
political voice and the "problem with no name." While in the 1970s, discussions about
gender and sexuality concluded that the "sex/gender system," also known as patriarchy,
defeated their purpose toward complete liberation because of its economic structure
aimed at benefiting men. Although they appreciated the notion of a collective voice for
all women, the development of individual voices among women played a more
significant role in the 1970's discourses about gender and sexuality. Because men have
predominantly controlled the medical field, women in the 1970s, who wrote about
gender and sexuality then, also attacked physicians like Dr. Mitchell who diagnosed
women with strange treatments and also worked for the prohibition of the practice of
mid-wifery in America at the turn of the century. Other critics of the 1970s decided that
Cather's life reflected that of a lesbian, so that by the 1980s, literary discourses
involving gender and sexuality began asking questions about the purpose of Cather and
Gilman's writings. If female authors like Cather and Gilman lived such politically
conscious lives, then why did they not create narratives that reflected their political
80
agendas? After questioning their narratives, some critics decided that Cather and
Gilman carried a "duplicitous nature" or a twofold message in their short yet complex
stories. This duplicitous style of writing explained how that by the 1990s discussions
about gender and sexuality had evolved into the "crafting of characters" that resulted in
While First and Second Wavers fought for the elimination of binary gender
divisions and a balance in gender relations that supported the economic development of
all women in America, Cather and Gilman's writings facilitated discussions during both
Waves that contributed to the reasons why the social construction of gender and
sexuality did not result in equal human treatment, and should therefore be reconstructed.
The literature concerning women during the First and Second Waves of
question of the nature and genesis of women's oppression and social subordination, and
how to change its effects on the future of the human race. What started off as strictly
constructed and enforced gender roles in Victorian America evolved into gender
performativity in the latter part of this century. This socio-sexuo evolution lies within
the protagonists' discontent and total rebellion in Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" and
Cather's "Paul's Case," whose stories both surfaced at the turn of the 20`h century in
America, when socially-conscious citizens inspected these rigid Victorian ideals, and
whose stories later resurfaced again during the Second Wave of Feminism at the middle
to end of the 201h century, when individuals re-enacted these same socially constructed
Lather's "Paul's Case" functions as a touchstone of her short fiction that even
Cather agreed valued notice, since she only allowed it to be reprinted of all her other
examination of say The Professor's House and A Lost Lady as well as My Antonia to
elusive authorial approach toward gender and sexuality that has made her reputation
outlast herself, should reveal even a deeper sense of her literary complexities. Gilman's
utopian novels, Moving the Mountain,. Herland, and With Her in Ourland, that came
after "The Yellow Wallpaper" deserve a closer look in the same respect as she struggled
to portray the possibilities and barriers facing a woman who attempted to combine love
and work. The movement in Gilman's writing progressively develops the possibilities
and highlights the key barriers for a woman: female resistance to social change and
male incomprehension concerning the necessity for love and work in a woman's life.
She visualized the transition from the present to the future as one of internal conversion
interior power and men renouncing oppressive power structures as individuals and as a
society. Perhaps too this is why Gilman, like Cather, switched to a male narrator in
Endnotes
1 William Dean Howells anthologized "The Yellow Wallpaper" in 1920 for one of his
Great Modern American Stories. The Feminist Press republished it in 1973 with an
Afterword by Elaine Hedges, which is when Gilman's feminist perspective on the
socio-cultural situation confronting women in the late nineteenth century came to life
again, and has become the Press's all time best seller having sold more than 225,000
copies.
2
"Hysteria, the disease with which Freud so famously began his investigation into the
dynamic connections between psyche and soma, is by definition a `female disease,' not
so much because it takes its name from the Greek word for womb, hyster (the organ
which was in the nineteenth century suppose to `cause' this emotional disturbance), [but
because it was] thought to be caused by the female reproductive system"(Gilbert and
Gubar 53). See Madwoman for further discussion of hysteria as a form of "patriarchal
socialization"(53).
'When Cather published "Paul's Case" in 1905, the "gender troubled" Paul wore a
"stray flower" a red carnation which critics have suggested offered a veiled connection
to Oscar Wilde who was imprisoned for sodomy. "In the appendix to Wilde's trial it is
ascertained that in France homosexuals wear green carnations to signal their
availability, and Wilde flagrantly allies himself with this practice in the wearing of such
flowers himself'(Butler 160). In 1890, Cather was also noted for having written
newspaper columns and reviews that were about Oscar Wilde and were "unremittingly
hostile" toward his behavior. She despised his aesthetic approach to art, his
"insincerity" and his "driveling effeminacy"(Summers 104). Ten years later she would
create a character that somewhat resembled him. All quotations taken from Cather's
articles on Wilde were taken from The Kingdom of Art: Willa Cather's First Principles
and Critical Statements 1893-1896.
4 W & E first appeared in 1898 after several months of intensive writing; it was almost
immediately republished in 1899. The book attracted wide attention; ultimately seven
editions appeared in the United States and Great Britain and it was translated into seven
languages, including Japanese, Russian and Hungarian.
5 The decade following the publishing of W & E (and her second marriage) was one of
extreme productivity. During this major phase of her literary career, she wrote several
book-length treatises: Concerning Children (1900), The Home: Its Work and Influence
(1903), Human Work (1904), and The Man-Made World; Or, Our Androcentric Culture
(1909-1910). In addition, between 1899 and 1910, she regularly contributed to major
magazines including The Saturday Evening Post, Scribner's, Woman's Home
Companion, and Harper's Bazar. (Knight 162)
6 A very dedicated writer, Gilman was the publisher and sole contributor to each
monthly issue of her independent journal The Forerunner, which was published for
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seven years through 1916. "The Forerunner and its cornucopia of [novels, three of them
published serially,] essays, poems, and stories, . . . reflect not only Gilman's private
trials and experiences, but also her immersion in a variety of lively intellectual currents
and personal relationships with a host of nationally prominent scholars, writers and
social activists.... where Gilman defined herself professionally as a 'sociologist."'
(Deegan 9)
7
Following a visit to Europe, Sanger and a small group of women met in her home and
organized the first American Birth Control League declaring it "aims to enlighten and
educate all sections of the American public in the various aspects of the dangers of
uncontrolled procreation and the imperative necessity of a world program of Birth
Control"(28 1). Further, "the League aims to correlate the findings of scientists,
statisticians, investigators, and social agencies in all fields"(28 1).
8
For Sanger's order of classification of her statistical analysis found in the ending pages
of her book, she organized them covering the following eight areas: (1)geographic
distribution, (2) economic status, (3)mother's age, (4) number of children, (5) frequency
of children, (6) family health, (7)pathological conditions at pregnancy, and (8),
miscarriages and stillbirths. From these headings, number eight's grid is presented
partially below and represents data collected from 3,080 women, who they themselves
and she referred to as "typical `breeders"' or "mothers of large families." (446)
regarding women. (On a significant side note, Friedan was the founder of NOW, the
National Organization of Women.)
12 Ehrenreich and English in For Her Own Good reported that he earned over $60,000
per year "the equivalent of over $300,000.00 in today's dollars"(101). These figures
from 1979 are almost 20 years old, which would average his income much higher in this
day based upon their figures.
13
Newsweek, March 7, 1960 was the date she referenced for her citation.
14
Any thorough discussion about the evolution of America's views on sexuality would
be incomplete without the incorporation of the infamous French feminist and author of
The Second Sex Simone de Beauvoir, who in it traced women's oppression from a
biological standpoint and revealed the misconceptions of gender because of the male-
dominated medical field that has determined women as the Other.
15
Ellmann is referring to "the eloquent denunciation of the cream separator in One of
Ours written by Cather.
16 Her
book reports that she had originally presented this article as a speech at the
Radcliffe institute in 1962, worthwhile to mention because the earlier date almost
situates her views a decade earlier.
17 In this article, G. Rubin also focused on "the Oedipus hex" upon women and the
Electra complex as a variant of the Oedipal complex described for males. Further, she
homed in on Lacan's theory of psychoanalysis and his explanation of the phallus and its
relationship to systems of kinship.
17
Ehrenreich and English relay this information to their readers and note that their
reported information comes from "an otherwise fond biographer" (101).
18 L. Rubin alerts us to which version of this short story he refers to, that is Willa
Cather's "Paul's Case," in Youth and the Bright Medusa (New York, Knopf, 1920),
p.199). He also adds that "all subsequent page references are to this collection"(129).
19
French also criticized George Sand, George Eliot, Virginia Woolf and Edith Wharton
for not creating female protagonists who shared in the same liberties they had and/or
who exhibited the unique lifestyles the authors had.
20 It is interesting to note here that French capitalized on this "breaking the silence"
concept that she expected of the group of authors she wrote about in the aforementioned
article within that same year. In her book Her Mother's Daughter, a daughter breaks the
silence that her mother could not. French adds that the cycle of repetition can be
arrested, if a woman decides to acknowledge the anger and frustration that women
experience.
85
21 In Strategies of Reticence: Silence and Meaning in the Works of Jane Austen, Will
Cather, Katherine Anne Porter, and Joan Didion(1990), Stout explores the conscious
and unconscious chosen strategies of these authors in their work which manifests
qualities of silence or withholding for effect.
22 "'Compulsive
heterosexuality,"' Rich writes, "was named as one of the 'crimes
against women' by the Brussels International Tribunal on Crimes against Women in
1976" (138).
23
For a thorough comparative discussion of Butler and Sedgwick's approach toward
gender and sexuality turn to Mark Micale's 1995 book Approaching Hysteria: Disease
and Its Interpretations.
86
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