Fictions of Authority: Women Writers and Narrative Voice
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Drawing on narratological and feminist theory, Susan Sniader Lanser explores patterns of narration in a wide range of novels by women of England, France, and the United States from the 1740s to the present. She sheds light on the history of "voice" as a narrative strategy and as a means of attaining social power. She considers the dynamics in personal voice in authors such as Mary Shelley, Charlotte Brontë, Zora Neale Hurston, and Jamaica Kincaid. In writers who attempt a "communal voice"—including Mary Wollstonecraft, Elizabeth Gaskell, Joan Chase, and Monique Wittig—she finds innovative strategies that challenge the conventions of Western narrative.
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Fictions of Authority - Elizabeth Shesko
INTRODUCTION
1
Toward a Feminist Poetics of Narrative Voice
Why this privileged relationship with the voice?
—HÉlÈNE CIXOUS, The Laugh of the Medusa
Few words are as resonant to contemporary feminists as voice.
The term appears in history and philosophy, in sociology, literature, and psychology, spanning disciplinary and theoretical differences. Book titles announce another voice,
a different voice,
or resurrect the lost voices
of women poets and pioneers; fictional figures ancient and modern, actual women famous and obscure, are honored for speaking up and speaking out.¹ Other silenced communities—peoples of color, peoples struggling against colonial rule, gay men and lesbians—have also written and spoken about the urgency of coming to voice.
Despite compelling interrogations of voice
as a humanist fiction, for the collectively and personally silenced the term has become a trope of identity and power: as Luce Irigaray suggests, to find a voice (voix) is to find a way (voie).²
In narrative poetics (narratology
), voice is an equally crucial though more circumscribed term, designating tellers—as distinct from both authors and nonnarrating characters—of narrative. Although many critics acknowledge the bald inaccuracy of voice
and teller
to signify something written, these terms persist even among structuralists: according to Gérard Genette, in the most unobtrusive narrative, someone is speaking to me, is telling me a story, is inviting me to listen to it as he tells it.
³ Narration entails social relationships and thus involves far more than the technical imperatives for getting a story told. The narrative voice and the narrated world are mutually constitutive; if there is no tale without a teller, there is no teller without a tale. This interdependence gives the narrator a liminal position that is at once contingent and privileged: the narrator has no existence outside
the text yet brings the text into existence; narrative speech acts cannot be said to be mere imitations,
like the acts of characters, because they are the acts that make the imitations
possible.
Despite their shared recognition of the power of voice,
the two concepts I have been describing—the feminist and the narratological—have entailed separate inquiries of antithetical tendency: the one general, mimetic, and political, the other specific, semiotic, and technical. When feminists talk about voice, we are usually referring to the behavior of actual or fictional persons and groups who assert woman-centered points of view. Thus feminists may speak of a literary character who refuses patriarchal pressures as finding a voice
whether or not that voice is represented textually. When narrative theorists talk about voice, we are usually concerned with formal structures and not with the causes, ideologies, or social implications of particular narrative practices. With a few exceptions, feminist criticism does not ordinarily consider the technical aspects of narration, and narrative poetics does not ordinarily consider the social properties and political implications of narrative voice.⁴ Formalist poetics may seem to feminists naively empiricist, masking ideology as objective truth, sacrificing significance for precision, incapable of producing distinctions that are politically meaningful. Feminist criticism may seem to narratologists naively subjectivist, sacrificing precision for ideology, incapable of producing distinctions that are textually meaningful.
These incompatible tendencies, which I have overstated here, can offer fruitful counterpoints. As a narratological term, voice
attends to the specific forms of textual practice and avoids the essentializing tendencies of its more casual feminist usages. As a political term, voice
rescues textual study from a formalist isolation that often treats literary events as if they were inconsequential to human history. When these two approaches to voice
converge in what Mikhail Bakhtin has called a sociological poetics,
⁵ it becomes possible to see narrative technique not simply as a product of ideology but as ideology itself: narrative voice, situated at the juncture of social position and literary practice,
⁶ embodies the social, economic, and literary conditions under which it has been produced.⁷ Such a sociological or materialist poetics refuses the idealism to which both narrative poetics and some forms of feminist theory have been prone, an idealism that has led in the first case to a reading of textual properties as universal, inevitable, or random phenomena, and in the second to the assumption of a panhistorical women’s language
or female form.
I maintain that both narrative structures and women’s writing are determined not by essential properties or isolated aesthetic imperatives but by complex and changing conventions that are themselves produced in and by the relations of power that implicate writer, reader, and text. In modern Western societies during the centuries of print culture
with which I am concerned, these constituents of power must include, at the very least, race, gender, class, nationality, education, sexuality and marital status, interacting with and within a given social formation.
So long as it acknowledges its own status as theory rather than claiming to trade in neutral, uninterpreted facts, a historically-situated structuralist poetics may offer a valuable differential framework for examining specific narrative patterns and practices. The exploration of narrative structures in women’s writings may, in turn, challenge the categories and postulates of narratology, since the canon on which narrative theory is grounded has been relentlessly if not intentionally man-made.⁸ As one contribution to such a feminist poetics of narrative, this book explores certain configurations of textual voice in fictions by women of Britain, France, and the United States writing from the mid-eighteenth century to the mid-twentieth—the period that coincides with the hegemony of the novel and its attendant notions of individual(ist) authorship. Recognizing that the author-function
that grounds Western literary authority is constructed in white, privileged-class male terms,⁹ I take as a point of departure the hypothesis that female voice—a term used here simply to designate the narrator’s grammatical gender—is a site of ideological tension made visible in textual practices.
In thus linking social identity and narrative form, I am postulating that the authority of a given voice or text is produced from a conjunction of social and rhetorical properties. Discursive authority—by which I mean here the intellectual credibility, ideological validity, and aesthetic value claimed by or conferred upon a work, author, narrator, character, or textual practice—is produced interactively; it must therefore be characterized with respect to specific receiving communities. In Western literary systems for the past two centuries, however, discursive authority has, with varying degrees of intensity, attached itself most readily to white, educated men of hegemonic ideology. One major constituent of narrative authority, therefore, is the extent to which a narrator’s status conforms to this dominant social power. At the same time, narrative authority is also constituted through (historically changing) textual strategies that even socially unauthorized writers can appropriate. Since such appropriations may of course backfire, nonhegemonic writers and narrators may need to strike a delicate balance in accommodating and subverting dominant rhetorical practices.
Although I have been speaking about authority as if it were universally desirable, some women writers have of course questioned not only those who hold authority and the mechanisms by which they are authorized, but the value of authority as modern Western cultures have constructed it. I believe, however, that even novelists who challenge this authority are constrained to adopt the authorizing conventions of narrative voice in order, paradoxically, to mount an authoritative critique of the authority that the text therefore also perpetuates. Carrying out such an Archimedean project, which seems to me particularly hazardous for texts seeking canonical status, necessitates standing on the very ground one is attempting to deconstruct. While I will acknowledge ways in which women writers continue to challenge even their own authoritative standing, the emphasis of this book is on the project of self-authorization, which, I argue, is implicit in the very act of authorship. In other words, I assume that regardless of any woman writer’s ambivalence toward authoritative institutions and ideologies, the act of writing a novel and seeking to publish it—like my own act of writing a scholarly book and seeking to publish it—is implicitly a quest for discursive authority: a quest to be heard, respected, and believed, a hope of influence. I assume, that is, that every writer who publishes a novel wants it to be authoritative for her readers, even if authoritatively antiauthoritarian, within the sphere and for the receiving community that the work carves out. In making this assumption I am not denying what Edward Said calls the molested
or sham
nature of textual authority in general and of fictional authority in particular, but I am also reading the novel as a cultural enterprise that has historically claimed and received a truth value beyond the fictional.¹⁰
I have chosen to examine texts that engage questions of authority specifically through their production of narrative voice. In each case, narrative voice is a site of crisis, contradiction, or challenge that is manifested in and sometimes resolved through ideologically charged technical practices. The texts I explore construct narrative voices that seek to write themselves into Literature without leaving Literature the same. These narrators, skeptical of the authoritative aura of the male pen and often critical of male dominance in general, are nonetheless pressed by social and textual convention to reproduce the very structures they would reformulate. Such narrators often call into question the very authority they endorse or, conversely, endorse the authority they seem to be questioning. That is, as they strive to create fictions of authority, these narrators expose fictions of authority as the Western novel has constructed it—and in exposing the fictions, they may end up re-establishing the authority. Some of these texts work out such dilemmas on their thematic surfaces, constructing fictions of—that is, about—authority, as well.
When I describe these complexities in some women’s writings I am not, however, suggesting any kind of authentic
female voice or arguing that women necessarily write differently from men. Rather, I believe that disavowed writers of both sexes have engaged in various strategies of adaptation and critique that make their work dialogical
in ways that Bakhtin’s formulation, which posits heteroglossia as a general modern condition, may obscure.¹¹ It is possible, for example, that women privileged enough to write literature are particularly susceptible to what Margaret Homans describes as a specific gender-based alienation from language
born of the simultaneous participation in and exclusion from a hegemonic group.
¹² My reading suggests that different communities of women have had different degrees of access to particular narrative forms. I am especially interested in those female narrators who claim public authority, since within the historical period I am studying it has not been voice in general so much as public voice that women have been denied. As I will suggest further on in this chapter, these concerns lead me less to a new narrative poetics than to a poetics attentive to issues that conventional narratology has devalued or ignored.
Before describing more fully the focus of this book, I want to illustrate the complex dynamics that may govern a specific production of female voice by turning to a curious document that appeared in Atkinson’s Casket in April 1832:¹³
FEMALE INGENUITY.
Secret Correspondence.—A young Lady, newly married, being obliged to show her husband, all the letters she wrote, sent the following to an intimate friend.
I cannot be satisfied, my Dearest Friend!
blest as I am in the matrimonial state,
unless I pour into your friendly bosom,
which has ever been in unison with mine,
the various deep sensations which swell
with the liveliest emotions of pleasure
my almost bursting heart. I tell you my dear
husband is one of the most amiable of men,
I have been married seven weeks, and
have never found the least reason to
repent the day that joined us, my husband is
in person and manners far from resembling
ugly, crass, old, disagreeable, and jealous
monsters, who think by confining to secure;
a wife, it is his maxim to treat as a
bosom-friend and confidant, and not as a
play thing or menial slave, the woman
chosen to be his companion. Neither party
he says ought to obey implicitly;—
but each yield to the other by turns—
An ancient maiden aunt, near seventy,
a cheerful, venerable, and pleasant old lady,
lives in the house with us—she is the delight
of both young and old—she is civil
to all the neighbourhood round,
generous and charitable to the poor—
I know my husband loves nothing more
than he does me; he flatters me more
than the glass, and his intoxication
(for so I must call the excess of his love,)
often makes me blush for the unworthiness
of its object, and I wish I could be more deserving
of the man whose name I bear. To
say all in one word, my dear,_, and to
crown the whole, my former gallant lover
is now my indulgent husband, my fondness
is returned, and I might have had
a Prince, without the felicity I find with
him. Adieu! May you be as blest as I am unable
to wish that I could be more
happy.
For those who believe in a women’s language
that is polite, emotional, enthusiastic, gossipy, talkative, uncertain, dull, and chatty,
¹⁴or weak, trivial, ineffectual, tentative, hesitant, hyperpolite, euphemistic, and... marked by gossip and gibberish,
¹⁵ this text might be hailed as perfect evidence. Its self-effacing writer, who blushes at her own unworthiness,
nonetheless cannot say all in one word
; repetition, hyperbole, convolution, and grammatical anomaly are the pervasive structures of her text. It has been argued that such self-deprecating, uncertain, and verbose discourse, which women in certain circumstances have supposedly been encouraged to adopt, also undermines its own authority.¹⁶
But let us recall that this bride was obliged to show the letter to her husband; a note at the bottom of the Casket entry tells us that the key to the above letter, is to read the first and then every alternate line
:
I cannot be satisfied, my dearest Friend!
unless I pour into your friendly bosom,
the various deep sensations which swell
my almost bursting heart. I tell you my dear
I have been married seven weeks, and
repent the day that joined us, my husband is
ugly, crass, old, disagreeable, and jealous[;]
a wife, it is his maxim to treat as a
play thing or menial slave, the woman
he says ought to obey implicitly;—
An ancient maiden aunt, near seventy,
lives in the house with us—she is the devil
to all the neighbourhood round,
I know my husband loves nothing more
than the glass, and his intoxication
often makes me blush for the unworthiness
of the man whose name I bear. To
crown the whole, my former gallant lover
is returned, and I might have had
him. Adieu! may you be as blest as I am un
happy.
If the surface letter is virtually a sampler of what has passed for women’s language,
this subtext
is an equally striking example of what might stereotypically be called men’s language
: it is capable, direct, rational,
strong,
¹⁷ forceful, efficient, blunt, authoritative, serious, effective, sparing and masterful.
¹⁸ This narrator, writing for a sister’s eye, shows herself angry, decisive, judgmental, acutely aware of her husband’s deficiencies and her own lost opportunities. Beneath the putatively feminine voice of effusive self-effacement lies the putatively masculine voice of indignant self-assertion, which the writer cannot inscribe in the more public version of her text. These formal differences between the letters, which share the same originating female voice, are clearly not differences in the sex of the narrator, though they may be attributable to differences in the sex of the narratee. The feminine style
of the surface text, that powerless,
non-authoritative form called women’s language,
here becomes a powerfully subversive mask for telling secrets to a woman under the watchful eyes of a man. In Irigaray’s terms, the surface letter is a disruptive excess,
a mimicry
: it deliberately adopts a feminine
position that is exaggerated into subversion by exposing the mechanisms of its own abjection (thereby revealing at the same time its dependence upon the words of the powerful
).¹⁹ The female voice conforms in order to con
form: women’s language
becomes a calculated response to alienation and censorship, an evasion of material threat.
I will argue, however, that this discourse is not simply women’s language
—or even, as some linguists would have it, a universal language of the powerless
—but the product of a particular set of stereotypes that become codified in Victorian gender ideologies. This language is associated specifically with the lady
who maintains her position through a conscious or unconscious discourse of devotion to the men who control her life. It is less the language of women than the language of wives: the woman in this text—the independent human of female sex—is in fact represented by the voice whose language would be called masculine.
In other words, in this blatantly dialogized discourse, both voices are female; female voice
is not an essence
but a variable subject position whose I
is grammatically feminine. The particular characteristics of any female voice,
then, are a function of the context in which that voice operates.
This context, moreover, is less simple than it appears. Because the letter is deliberately coded, the subtext makes the surface letter seem only a fiction and the hidden message all the truth.
In this case women’s language
becomes a code adopted to confuse a male public,
as if privately—that is, to another woman—a woman can simply say what she means. But this opposition deconstructs itself when one asks how two such disparate narratives can produce a continuous text. The articulation between surface and subtext, the syntactic hinge that binds and finally transforms the whole, is a set of negative constructions that the decoding process pares away:
I [... have never found the least reason to] repent my husband is . . . [far from resembling] ugly, crass, old . . . a wife, it is his maxim to treat . . . [not] as a plaything [Neither party], he says, ought to obey implicitly I am un[able to wish that I could be more] happy—
This negativity turns out to be more than the link between texts; it makes the surface text not simply a proclamation of one woman’s marital happiness but an indirect indictment of marriage itself. In its negations, the surface letter written for
the husband describes as normative the kind of marriage the writer claims to have escaped; each statement about the speaker’s good fortune implies a norm in which brides repent their marriages, husbands are monstrous, and women are playthings
or slaves.
Thus, by saying what one marriage is not, the surface text shows what its narrator expected marriage to be. While the subtext condemns one husband and laments one bride’s fate—suggesting that the writer has merely married the wrong
man—the surface letter condemns marriage itself, presenting as typical the conditions that seem in the subtext to be individual. The subtext, with its portrait of a miserable bride, thus becomes an illustration of the surface text rather than its antithesis, and it is fitting that the two versions meet only in a shared dissatisfaction, in the single line that does not change: I cannot be satisfied, my dearest Friend!
Even without the subtext, then, the surface letter is already doublevoiced, representing in one discourse both the uncritical acceptance of one marriage and a critical rejection of marriage itself. This doubleness also means that the surface letter is at least as authoritative as the hidden undertext, that authority resides not simply in men’s language
(which in this case is asserting only an individual, experiential truth
), but also in the indirection of a censored and stereo-typically feminine
form. Nor is this letter simply a palimpsest
in which surface designs conceal or obscure deeper, less accessible (and less socially acceptable) levels of meaning,
²⁰ for this surface design
turns out to carry meanings at least as disturbing as the subtext it purports to protect.
I have explored this letter in some detail not to reinforce notions of discursive sexual difference but, on the contrary, to suggest the complexity and specificity of (women’s) narrative practices even in obviously coded texts. Underscoring crucial differences of function and form between private
and public
discourse, the letter represents its own formal practices as neither arbitrary nor simply representational, but as responses to situational imperatives produced by the relations of power that acts of telling entail. Narrative status, contact, and stance are revealed to be mutually constitutive: the ways in which narrators represent themselves, the relationships they construct with narratees, and the ideological and affective positions they take are dynamic and interdependent elements. In illustrating the intricacies of narrative strategy in a culture that censors female voice, and the specificity of different narrative constructions for different audiences and purposes, the letter asks those who would not be deceived husbands
not only to read beneath surfaces but to read surfaces anew, not only to read manifest content
but to read the content of manifest form.
And if the letter as private correspondence seems to figure the male as the duped reader and the female as the ideal one, the letter as a public document has as its audience the unidentified reader of either sex who, presented with the text as it appeared in Atkinson’s Casket, can read beyond the immediate context of the letter-writer’s circumstances to understand female ingenuity
as cultural critique.
Finally, the publication of this letter in 1832, in a city where African-American and white women were becoming involved in abolitionist activity (the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society was founded in 1833), suggests that the relationship between patriarchy and slavery implicit in the reference to the wife as a menial slave
may be more than casual: it both raises the problematic history of white women’s appropriation of slavery by analogy²¹ and reminds us that American slaves also made extensive use of coding in order to evade censorship. It seems doubly appropriate, then, that ingenuity
means not only a paradoxical blend of skillful design and apparent openness but also, according to the OED, the quality or condition of being a free-born man.
In theory, writing becomes a powerful site of transformation to this condition
of freedom insofar as writing may be detached from its producing subject. The public circulation of texts by women has thus posed a pervasive threat to patriarchy, as the public circulation of slave writings posed a pervasive threat to slavery, and these threats may explain why the forms and performances of women and peoples of color have often been devalued as mere ingenuity.
Atkinson’s Casket presents the bride’s letter without revealing the circumstances of its composition, the identity of its composer, or the process by which it came to be a public text. If, as I suspect, the letter is apocryphal (that is, not an actual bride’s correspondence), it is double-voiced in yet another sense: it has represented fiction as history. The voice that introduces the letter becomes its authorizing agent and the letter-writer a fictional narrator created to perform a politically motivated exercise in ingenuity.
Fiction becomes a set of strategies for mitigating the audacity of opposition, and the very fact of the fiction becomes evidence of a censorship subtler but no less significant than that imposed on the young bride. Private voice (here, the voice of the bride addressing only her closest female friend) becomes an enabling strategy for writing what is manifestly forbidden as public
narrative. To other compelling explanations for women’s historical association with the novel—its formal and thematic pliability at the time when women began writing in significant numbers; its ambiguous status as literature; its feasibility as a source of both income and discursive power—one must surely add the opportunities the novel affords for creating voices on the margins of fiction and history that both mask and enable the most challenging fictions of authority.
This book begins with the simultaneous rise
of the novel and emergence of modern gender identity in the mid-eighteenth century, and moves toward what may well be the twilight of both. As I situate narrative practices in relation to literary production and social ideology, I will be asking what forms of voice have been available to women, and to which women, at particular moments. My intention is to explore through specifically formal evidence the intersection of social identity and textual form, reading certain aspects of narrative voice as a critical locus of ideology.
I have organized the book to focus on changing problems and patterns in the articulation of three narrative modes which I call, respectively, authorial, personal, and communal voice. Each mode represents not simply a set of technical distinctions but a particular kind of narrative consciousness and hence a particular nexus of powers, dangers, prohibitions, and possibilities. Across all three modes, however, I will be concerned with two aspects of narration that I consider of greater significance in the construction of textual authority than narrative poetics has traditionally allowed. The first is the distinction between private voice (narration directed toward a narratee who is a fictional character) and public voice (narration directed toward a narratee outside
the fiction who is analogous to the historical reader). The second is the distinction between narrative situations that do and those that do not permit narrative self-reference, by which I mean explicit attention to the act of narration itself. It is my hypothesis that gendered conventions of public voice and of narrative self-reference serve important roles in regulating women’s access to discursive authority.
I use the term authorial voice to identify narrative situations that are heterodiegetic, public, and potentially self-referential. (Gérard Genette, observing that every narrator is potentially an enunciating I,
suggests the more precise term heterodiegetic for what is traditionally called third-person
narration in which the narrator is not a participant in the fictional world and exists on a separate ontological plane from the characters.²²) The mode I am calling authorial is also ex-tradiegetic
and public, directed to a narratee who is analogous to a reading audience.²³ I have chosen the term authorial
not to imply an ontological equivalence between narrator and author but to suggest that such a voice (re)produces the structural and functional situation of authorship. In other words, where a distinction between the (implied) author and a public, heterodiegetic narrator is not textually marked, readers are invited to equate the narrator with the author and the narratee with themselves (or their historical equivalents). This conventional equation gives authorial voice a privileged status among narrative forms; as Bakhtin states, while the discourse of a character or a stylized narrator is always a contingent object of authorial understanding,
authorial discourse is directed toward its own straightforward referential meaning.
²⁴ Moreover, since authorial narrators exist outside narrative time (indeed, outside
fiction) and are not humanized
by events, they conventionally carry an authority superior to that conferred on characters, even on narrating characters. In using the term authorial
I mean as well to evoke Franz Stanzel’s distinction in Narrative Situations in the Novel between authorial
and figural
modes: while authorial narrative permits what I am calling narrative self-reference, in the figural
mode all narration is focalized through the perspectives of characters, and thus no reference to the narrator or the narrative situation is feasible.
I want to suggest as a major element of authorial status a distinction between narrators who engage exclusively in acts of representation—that is, who simply predicate the words and actions of fictional characters—and those who undertake extrarepresentational
acts: reflections, judgments, generalizations about the world beyond
the fiction, direct addresses to the narratee, comments on the narrative process, allusions to other writers and texts.²⁵ I will be using the term overt authoriality or simply authoriality, to refer to practices by which heterodiegetic, public, self-referential narrators perform these extra-representational
functions not strictly required for telling a tale. I am speculating that acts of representation make a more limited claim to discursive authority than extrarepresentational acts, which expand the sphere of fictional authority to nonfictional
referents and allow the writer to engage, from within
the fiction, in a culture’s literary, social, and intellectual debates. On the other hand, as Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan has observed, when a narrator becomes more overt, his chances of being fully reliable are diminished, since his interpretations, judgements, generalizations are not always compatible with the norms of the implied author.
²⁶
Extrarepresentational acts are especially critical to a polyglossic genre like the novel because they enable the narrator to construct the maxims
that Genette describes as the foundation of verisimilitude.²⁷ In other words, the reception of a novel rests on an implicit set of principles by which textual events (for example, characters’ behaviors) are rendered plausible. To the degree that a text’s values deviate from cultural givens (as they will to some degree in all but the most formulaic of fictions), they must be established (or inferred) for each narrative instance so that readers can construct the story as plausible
and embed it in a world view.
²⁸ Ideologically oppositional writers might wish, therefore, to maxim-ize
their narratives in order either to posit alternative textual ideologies or to establish the writer, through her authorial narrator-equivalent, as a significant participant in contemporary debates—all the more during those periods when the novel was one of the few accepted means for women to intervene in public life.
It should not be difficult to understand why, with differences in kind and intensity according to time, place, and circumstance, women writers’ adoption of overt authoriality has usually meant transgressing gendered rhetorical codes. In cultures such as the ones I am examining, where women’s access to public discourse has been curtailed, it has been one thing for women simply to tell stories and another for their narrators to set themselves forth as authorities. Indeed, authorial voice has been so conventionally masculine that female authorship does not necessarily establish female voice: a startling number of critics have referred in the generic masculine to the narrators of such novels as La Princesse de Clèves and Pride and Prejudice.²⁹ Thus, on the one hand, since a heterodiegetic narrator need not be identified by sex, the authorial mode has allowed women access to male
authority by separating the narrating I
from the female body; it is of course in the exploitation of this possibility that women writers have used male narrators and pseudonyms (acts that may have profited individual writers or texts, but that have surely also reinforced the androcentrism of narrative authority). On the other hand, when an authorial voice has represented itself as female, it has risked being (dis)qualified. It is possible that women’s writing has carried fuller public authority when its voice has not been marked as female.
The narrators I discuss in Part I of this book have sought not simply to tell stories, but through overtly authorial practices to make themselves (and, I presume, their authors) significant literary presences. After examining an eighteenth-century text that proclaims the difficulty of achieving authoriality, Part I focuses on four canonical writers (Jane Austen, George Eliot, Virginia Woolf, and Toni Morrison) in order to explore the means by which each has constructed authorial voice within and against the narrative and social conventions of her time and place. In the work of all four writers I see a reaching for narrative hegemony, for what Wayne Booth has called direct and authoritative rhetoric,
³⁰ that is obscured both by the writers’ own disclaimers and by a tendency in contemporary feminist criticism to valorize refusals
of authority in ways that seem to me a historical.
I use the term personal voice to refer to narrators who are selfconsciously telling their own histories. I do not intend this term to designate all homodiegetic
or first-person
narratives—that is, all those in which the voice that speaks is a participant in the fictional world—but only those Genette calls autodiegetic,
in which the I
who tells the story is also the story’s protagonist (or an older version of the protagonist).³¹ In my exploration of personal voice I will exclude forms such as the interior monologue, which are not selfconsciously narrative and which, like figural narration, cannot construct a situation of narrative self-reference.
The authority of personal voice is contingent in ways that the authority of authorial voice is not: while the autodiegetic I
remains a structurally superior
voice mediating the voices of other characters, it does not carry the superhuman privileges that attach to authorial voice, and its status is dependent on a reader’s response not only to the narrator’s acts but to the character’s actions, just as the authority of the representation is dependent in turn on the successful construction of a credible voice. These differences make personal voice in some ways less formidable for women than authorial voice, since an authorial narrator claims broad powers of knowledge and judgment, while a personal narrator claims only the validity of one person’s right to interpret her experience.
At the same time, personal narration offers no gender-neutral mask or distancing third person,
no refuge in a generic voice that may pass as masculine.³² A female personal narrator risks the reader’s resistance if the act of telling, the story she tells, or the self she constructs through telling it transgresses the limits of the acceptably feminine. If women are encouraged to write only of themselves because they are not supposed to claim knowledge of men or the world,
when women have written only of themselves they have been labeled immodest and narcissistic, and criticized for displaying either their virtues or their faults. Moreover, because male writers have created female voices, the arena of personal narration may also involve a struggle over which representations of female voice are to be authorized.
Although authorial narration, with its omniscient privilege, is usually understood to be fictional, fiction in the personal voice is usually formally indistinguishable from autobiography. Given the precarious position of women in patriarchal societies, woman novelists may have avoided personal voice when they feared their work would be taken for autobiography. The use of personal voice also risks reinforcing the convenient ideology of women’s writing as self-expression,
the product of intuition
rather than of art;³³ perhaps this is why Maxine Hong Kingston stated recently that she did not believe she would be