Female Violence PDF
Female Violence PDF
Female Violence PDF
by
Kiley Kapuscinski
Queen’s University
(July, 2008)
This study examines the figure of the violent woman in Atwood’s fiction as a productive
starting point for the re-evaluation of various socio-cultural debates. Emerging from
Atwood’s conviction that art, in its various forms, is often involved in the re-writing of
in order to evince the reformative work and often unconventional forms of brutality
employed by women in Atwood’s novels, including Surfacing, The Blind Assassin, Lady
Oracle, and Cat’s Eye, and in her collections of short fiction, such as Dancing Girls,
Bluebeard’s Egg, The Penelopiad, and The Tent. Throughout, I demonstrate the
within her broader social milieu. More precisely, the introductory chapter offers an
responses to this figure as she appears in Atwood’s fiction, that point to the need for a
critical vocabulary that addresses women’s capacity to enact harm. The second chapter
examines the various mythologies that define Canada and its people, and how the violent
narrative process open to re-evaluation. The third chapter moves away from this focus on
national narratives to highlight the discourses that similarly shape our understanding of
art, and those who participate in it. Here, the violent woman can be seen to engage in
revisionary work by exposing the limits of the Red Shoes Syndrome that has in many
ways come to define the fraught relationship between the female artist and her art. The
final chapter examines Atwood’s on-going fascination with various kinds of mythologies
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and her revisions of Classical and Biblical myths in order to highlight the veritable range
of female violence and the possibility, and at times necessity, of responding to these
discourses, this study concludes that traditionally marginal and nonliterary figures can
perform central and necessary roles and that Atwood’s fiction responds to, and in turn
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Acknowledgements
A major project like this is never done alone, and my endless gratitude goes out to all of
those who inspired and guided me along the way. My greatest thanks are extended to
Tracy Ware, whose encouragement and support have been extraordinary, and to Glenn
Willmott and Shannon Hengen for their thorough and insightful suggestions. A special
thank you also to my wonderful partner Mark Yourkevich and to my mother, both of
whom have always been proud of and excited about anything I do, and to my father, who
was always there in spirit. I am also grateful to Elisabeth Oliver, who offered sanity,
perspective, and many craft nights to help me work out the knots.
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Table of Contents
Abstract…………………………………………………………………………………...ii
Acknowledgements……………………………………………………………………….iv
Table of Contents………………………………………………………………………… v
Chapter 1: “Where have all the Lady Macbeths gone?”………………………………….1
Chapter 2: Negotiating the Nation……………………………………………………… 50
Chapter 3: Exis-tensions………………………………………………………………. 107
Chapter 4: Writing the Wrong………………………………………………………… 165
Chapter 5: “exploring the shadow side”………………………………………………. 218
Works Cited…………………………………………………………………………… 229
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Chapter 1
“Where have all the Lady Macbeths gone?”: The En-gendering of Violence
… I will enter a simple plea; women, both as characters and as people, must be allowed
their imperfections.
Reflecting upon her first novel, Up in the Air So Blue, written at age twenty-three,
Margaret Atwood recalls the centrality of violence to the unpublished narrative that
concludes on a grim note “with the female protagonist wondering whether or not to push
one of the male characters off a roof” (“Where Is How” 9). The rendering offered here of
the violent woman with the dangerous potential and willingness to respond to her
aggressive impulses is one that Atwood develops throughout her fiction. Venturing to
disrupt the enduring myth of Canada as a peaceable kingdom first articulated in the 1867
constitutional call for the definitively Canadian principles of “peace, order and good
government,” and the traditional roles of women as exclusively victims and witnesses of
violence, Atwood’s fiction offers images of female violence that boldly challenge
lingering historical tendencies to equate passivity and morality with the female gender.
Not surprisingly, Atwood’s various representations of violent women have left many
readers and critics unsettled, 1 to the extent that when Atwood poses the question, “Where
have all the Lady Macbeths gone?” (“Margaret Atwood’s Address”), the answer is not
only self-evident in the context of Atwood’s corpus, but evocative of distressing images
of female brutality that Atwood critics have hitherto failed to interpret within a fully-
1
the purpose of this study is to examine Atwood’s critically neglected fascination with the
figure of the violent woman in her novels, short stories, and mini-fictions and her
construction of this female figure as a destabilizing entity within the context of various
representations of violent women within her more widely ranging interest in violence and
the aggregate of other Canadian writers grappling with the very real potential of women
to do harm, this discussion frames its broader study of female brutality in Atwood’s
fiction by addressing the dispersed work of Atwoodian scholars who have only begun to
offer Atwood’s violent women the critical and theoretical attention they warrant, and the
more general dearth of critical frames within which to examine female brutality.
Moreover, despite the diffuse attempts of critics to acknowledge the presence of violent
women in Atwood’s fiction, such scholarly evaluations remain sparse and often
misleading, thus preventing this leitmotiv from achieving the critical mass necessary to
necessarily be an incomplete and ongoing one, this study nonetheless posits that an
broader issues of how Atwood imagines women’s place in literature, and the relationship
between literature and its social context. Emerging from Atwood’s conviction that art, in
its various forms, is often engaged in the re-writing of conventions, 2 and thus that new
ways of thinking proposed by creative works should be anticipated and celebrated, rather
violence in order to evince the communicative intent and often unconventional forms of
2
brutality employed by women in Atwood’s novels, such as Surfacing, Lady Oracle, Cat’s
Eye, The Blind Assassin, and The Penelopiad, and in her short fiction, including works
from Dancing Girls, Bluebeard’s Egg, Wilderness Tips, and The Tent. The exclusion of
Atwood’s poetry from this discussion, despite its frequent examination of human
brutality and violation, is intended not only to focus the scope of this study and to draw
attention to Atwood’s critically neglected short fiction, but also to reflect Atwood’s sense
that distils its surroundings, and of prose as offering a broader vision that ambitiously
attempts to account for “all of the cultural milieu” (“Evading” 137). 3 More aptly, the
latter form enables Atwood to more adequately address the revision of social narratives
and to provide a more extensive depiction of individuals interacting with their continually
changing social environment. Atwood’s interest in the intersections between the creative
act and engagement with one’s broader socio-cultural milieu, confirmed early in her
career through her “axiomatic” assertion that “art has its roots in social realities” (“A
Question” 53), has been repeatedly demonstrated by the manner in which her fictional
typically experienced by both the victimizer and the victim as an intensely personal
event, focusing exclusively on this intimacy in Atwood’s fiction limits one’s ability to see
the broader social resonances created by the violent act. Alternatively, by exploring how
Atwood’s violent women engage various socio-cultural topics, one is enabled to see how
Atwood’s fiction responds to, and in turn (re)creates, the social environment from which
it emerges.
3
Few Canadian writers have engaged as extensively or as successfully as Atwood
in social, cultural, and political issues, and perhaps even fewer have addressed the topic
of human violence that Atwood repeatedly forces her readers to contend with. Beyond
her assertion that “Witness is what you must bear” (“Notes”, True 69), which many
critics have formulated as her literary byword, Atwood emphasizes the importance of
openly discussing violence, rather than denying or evading its existence, in maintaining
that “The most important field of study at the moment is … the study of human
aggression” (“Canadian-American” 391). The range of violent acts that Atwood’s fiction
brings to light, including, but not limited to, self-directed violence (Lady Oracle, Cat’s
Eye, The Blind Assassin), 4 sexual violence (“Liking Men”), political violence (Bodily
Harm, The Handmaid’s Tale), historical violence (Alias Grace, The Penelopiad),
sacrificial violence (“The Resplendent Quetzal,” The Blind Assassin), and youth violence
(Cat’s Eye, The Tent), 5 reveals how Atwood’s focus on female brutality expands upon
and continues her dedication to recognizing violence in all its manifestations and to
seeing her surroundings as they are, rather than how they ideally should be. Ruth Parkin-
Gounelas’s notice of the “peculiarly visual, material quality” (687) of Atwood’s writing
in general further intimates that her writerly aesthetic reinforces, and ensures the
enduring impact of, the central motifs in her work. Atwood’s recognition of reality’s hard
truths, and the regrettable, but nonetheless inescapable, existence of brutality indicates
how, for Atwood, violence and aggression are not inhuman acts of monstrosity, but
deeply human behaviors reminding us of the inexorable fact that “Life contains awful
interviews, Atwood points out the stark reality and humanity informing her fictional
4
depictions of violence: “When I write about [violence], I try not to make anything up.
What some human beings have done to one another needs no embroidery, it’s all just
horrific the way it is” (my emphasis “Margaret Atwood” 198). Performing as thematic
refrains in her fiction, images of violence and brutality both allow Atwood to examine
humanity at depths that she could otherwise not plumb, and force her readers to
acknowledge that violence is not a disembodied construct, but a definitively human and
Historian” explains, “Despite the propaganda, there are no monsters” (Morning 51).
Responding to the distinctively human face that Atwood gives to violence, the
goal of this study is not to condone or absolve acts of female brutality, but rather, to
address how violence is an ineffaceable part of humanity, and to recognize how female
violence is implicated in, and comments on, broader social, cultural and political issues.
predeterminately bound to act in harmful ways, given Atwood’s belief in free will and the
fact that many women in her fiction are able to resist their impulses towards harm. 7 Yet
this does not lessen the extent to which all women are capable of inflicting grievous and
often permanent damage. This study emphasizes the importance of learning to read and
interpret female violence, rather than flatly dismissing its existence or relevance, and
stems from the belief that it is only in recognizing the often unexpected forms of
women’s brutality, and moving beyond the cognitive dissonance produced by the phrase
“violent woman,” that we can begin to understand this figure, and the central role she
5
Yet Atwood is not the first to recognize and humanize women’s violence through
her fiction, nor will she be the last. Contextualizing Atwood within a heritage of
Canadian writers who have similarly acknowledged the value of depicting violent women
literary anomalies. Likewise, the refusal to view Atwood’s violent women as isolated
literary events challenges the pervasive cultural myth that female brutality is a rare
aberration in, and an unlikely divergence from, an otherwise homogenous and predictable
female nature. Taken together, the assemblage of Canadian writers exploring female
violence testifies to the veritable range of women’s behaviors, and further suggests the
patriarchal oppression has been the most extensively employed approach to female
brutality in Canadian fiction, and Martha Ostenso’s Wild Geese (1925) is a landmark
depiction of how a woman’s decision to harm another stems from the severe restrictions
forced upon her. A primarily realist novel with aspects of the Gothic and regional
romance, Wild Geese narrates the lives of the Gare family as they struggle to survive both
the isolation of life on the Manitoba prairies and the constrictions placed upon them by
the power-hungry patriarch and head of their household, Caleb Gare. While Caleb’s
eldest daughter Ellen and his wife Amelia acquiesce to Caleb’s ceaseless desire to control
both his farmstead and his family, seventeen year-old Judith Gare resists her father’s
tyranny and effectively combats the suffocating environment that he creates. Anticipating
Ann Tracy’s Winter Hunger (1990), in which Diana’s cannibalizing of her infant son
Cam and murder of her husband Alan partially stems from Alan’s selfish desire to “bind
6
[Diana] to him forever” (164), and partially from her possession by the Wendigo spirit,
Wild Geese depicts Judith’s will to destroy as concomitant with her will to defy. Judith’s
introduction in the novel, effected through the image of her “great, defiant body” and her
recalcitrant stance, “as if prepared to take or give a blow” (11), offers an early
ways. Following an argument with Caleb in which he again attempts to regulate her
relationships and to physically punish her for her romantic trysts, Judith grabs the handle
of a nearby axe and throws it “with all her strength at Caleb’s head” (166); later reflecting
on the event, Judith recalls how her transgression was committed “with the intent to kill”
(188). Judith’s proclivity towards violence, elsewhere seen in her explicitly violent, yet
strangely intimate, behavior towards her lover Sven (85-6) and in her efforts to “smash
[Ellen’s] face” (188), suggests how her use of violence to repudiate patriarchal
dominance has extended into her more benign relationships and has led her to partake in
not human, but animalistic, tendencies and the “world of true instincts” (224) symbolized
Further examples of women’s use of violence to escape the brutal violations and
restrictions men have forced upon them include Ray Smith’s Lord Nelson Tavern (1974)
and Anne Cameron’s The Journey (1982). Yet other Canadian writers addressing female
capacity to enact violence upon other women. Works such as William Kirby’s The
Golden Dog (1877), Eden Robinson’s Monkey Beach (2000), and Ann-Marie
MacDonald’s The Way the Crow Flies (2003) explore the enduring harm resultant from
women’s often unmentionable acts of violence against members of their own sex, where
7
such acts are frequently portrayed as variations on the theme of women’s violent self-
hatred more fully articulated in novels such as Leonard Cohen’s Beautiful Losers (1966),
Sky Lee’s Disappearing Moon Café (1990), Ying Chen’s Ingratitude (1998), and Hélène
men or to brutalize the female body underscore the dangerousness of women’s violent
potential and render it a topic of serious literary consideration, not all representations of
the violent woman in Canadian fiction have lent her harmful behaviors such gravity.
Notwithstanding the tradition of writers who have insisted upon the profundity and
complexity of women’s violence, writers such as Jack Hodgins, in The Invention of the
World (1977), and John Mills, in Skevington’s Daughter (1978), have looked satirically
at female violence and cast women’s brutality as a parody of real violence, indicating the
various manifestations, it is surprising how few critical attempts have been made to
examine female brutality within the Canadian context. Yet the absence of a clear
definition of “violence” in the Canadian Criminal Code, 8 and the use of the masculine
pronoun “he” to define acts of assault in the most recent version of the document, mark
how there are social and legal factors enabling and encouraging this critical oversight.
While John Moss’s early study of Sex and Violence in the Canadian Novel (1977)
examines the issue of violence in Canadian fiction and the manner in which literary
depictions of violence demand ethical responses, his analysis forcefully yokes brutality to
sexuality and fails to offer a sustained examination of female violence and the ways in
8
which it dramatically redefines the traditionally masculine construct of aggression.
Similarly, the essays contained in the 1982 anthology Violence in the Canadian Novel
Since 1960, while at times encouraging new ways of thinking about harm, 9 frequently fall
back upon masculine paradigms of violence, or evade the issue of interpersonal brutality
by addressing the violence enacted in the violation and manipulation of literary forms.
More recently, Paula Ruth Gilbert’s Violence and the Female Imagination (2006) has
who are exploring the intersections among sex, gender and violence, yet Gilbert’s
analysis is deeply rooted in Quebec’s history and political ethos, and as such, neglects to
recognition has been given to women’s capacity to do harm. Beyond the traditional
with a nuanced place within both Canadian literature and discourses of violence. From
Sherrill Grace’s Violent Duality (1980), in which she draws attention to how, in Lady
Oracle, Joan “is cruelly treated and, in turn, causally if not vindictively, abuses others”
women’s participation in them, to Mary Kirtz’s recent essay, in which she notes how, in
Cat’s Eye, Elaine’s “monstrous behaviors” are “all too human” (70), Atwood critics are
increasingly extending the frames within which violence is recognized, and arriving at a
9
realization that Atwood herself has long known: that “Evil women are necessary in story
Over the past three decades, there have emerged several thematic centers around
which critical discussions of Atwood’s violent women have tended to convene. The most
interest in Gothicism. Frank Davey was among the first to note how Joan’s self-defensive
assault in Lady Oracle of a young reporter with a Cinzano bottle (after mistaking him for
an intruder) signals both her enactment of the stereotypical struggle of the Gothic heroine
with an ominous stranger and her decision to “re-enter the Gothic script” (Margaret
Atwood 60). Susan Jaret McKinstry similarly observes the Gothic conventions
underwriting female violence in Lady Oracle and further asserts Joan’s identity as
simultaneously that of the victim and the victimizer. Commenting on how, early in the
novel, Joan’s obese childhood self is figuratively killed by Joan’s adult self in her efforts
to revise her history and to forget her past, McKinstry argues that Joan’s “disguised,
murdered past return[s], in appropriate Gothic fashion, to haunt her” (63), and that Joan’s
murder of her childhood identity is coterminous with a defensive burial of her former self
that aims to both obscure and preserve her past, rather than destroy it outright.
Illuminating the ways in which Joan’s actions have become integrated into, and mimetic
of, the Gothic fictions she creates, McKinstry’s analysis of Joan’s imaginative murder
additionally reveals how the violent woman in Atwood’s fiction is a flexible and itinerant
figure whose violence is often enacted in non-physical ways, and with intensions other
than a desire to do harm. More recently, Coral Ann Howells has offered a re-evaluation
of The Edible Woman in light of the growing awareness of Gothic codes in Atwood’s
10
writing. Offering a further interpretation of one of Atwood’s earliest and most debated
images, Howells examines the anthropomorphic cake Marian creates and suggests that
her severing of the cake figure’s head is a “violent gesture with its parody of vampire-
slaying” that connotes how “the feminine image has been draining Marian’s life blood
but will have the power to do so no more” (Margaret Atwood 33-34). 10 Howells’s
analysis of female brutality and its empowering, if not redemptive, possibilities suggests
extent that it embodies one of the earliest representations of doubling and duplicity that
foregrounding Atwood’s use of Gothic conventions, a second critical trend is the linking
of the violent women to the image of the doppelgänger. While the uncanny double is
widely regarded as a central element of the Gothic, and is for some definitive of
Gothicism itself, the pervasiveness of critical attempts to link the violent woman with
images of duplicity warrants a separate analysis of the violent woman as uncanny Other.
many ways establishes a critical climate for later critics such as Annis Pratt to articulate
how, for example in Surfacing, the narrator is cognizant of her capacity to harm and is
“constantly aware of her brother as the technologically violent, murderer-side of her own
personality” (144). In her analysis of Cat’s Eye, Howells similarly notes the “threatening
games of death and burial” (“Transgressing” 146) cruelly initiated by Cordelia and her
existence as Elaine’s “tormentor and her own dark double” (“Transgressing” 145), an
11
observation echoed and extended by Nathalie Cooke, who urges us to recognize the
“disturbing” fact that we, as readers, can all “recognize some aspect of Cordelia in our
own childhood selves” (Biography 299). Numerous other critics, such as Barbara Hill
Rigney, who notes that Joan’s violent mother in Lady Oracle is Joan’s “double, a
reflected version of herself” (65), and Ann Heilmann, who resolves that Zenia in The
Robber Bride is “the embodiment of all that is repressed in society and the self” (175),
confirm how Atwood’s concern with unsettled bodily boundaries extends to her
representations of the violent female as uncanny Other. For many Atwood critics, the
violent woman is deeply disturbing not only because of her threatening presence and
A third way in which critics have read Atwood’s violent woman is to view her
to see the violent woman as an uncanny psychic fragment, and thus as an integral, albeit
unauthorized borrowing of male behaviors sever women’s ties to violence and suggest
that female violence always entails the violent woman acting as man and miming
elements of his masculinity. For example, Davey, in his early reading of Life Before Man,
finds Elizabeth emblematic of the “most ‘male’” force in the novel because her “chief
delight is ‘control’” and because her vehement words strike Chris (the “female force” in
the novel) “like a solid meeting a liquid, like a gunshot meeting flesh” (Margaret 90).
Explicitly aligning the masculine with authority, solidity and weaponry, and the feminine
12
Complicating Davey’s early observations, Cooke’s more recent analysis of Alias
violence in her portrayal of the convicted murderess Grace Marks and her ultimately
indeterminate identity as victim, villain, or both. Specifically, Cooke notes how male
characters “strive to prove Grace’s innocence” while “their female counterparts are
generally more suspicious” (Biography 325), suggesting that men, defensively holding
brutality, while women, who know the true range of women’s capabilities, find Grace’s
suspected transgressions less difficult to fathom. Yet Cooke, like Davey, fails to dispute
the cultural sense of women as foreigners to violence, or to suggest how masculine codes
of aggression are grossly inadequate within discussions of female violence, both of which
The fourth, and by far most sensationalist, approach has been the effort to align
Atwood’s violent women with Atwood herself. The autobiographical fallacy underlying
this approach has allowed critics and interviewers to imagine Atwood’s fiction as a
roman à clef that provides a window into the often elusive and extensively-sought
Atwood persona. Notwithstanding Atwood’s frequent insistence that her writing is not a
portal into her personal life and her at times ironic amusement with critics’ attempts to
match her to her literary creations, 11 interviewers such as Val Ross, in her discussion
with Atwood about The Robber Bride, attempt to tantalize readers by both dismissing the
notion that a “kinder, gentler Atwood” is offered in the novel and pointing to Atwood’s
likeness to Zenia, describing how, when Atwood smiles, she exposes “delicate, sharp
little teeth.” The erroneous and presumptuous congruities often drawn between Atwood
13
and her characters are encouraged by the opinions of literary critics such as George
Woodcock who, following his discussion of Atwood, insists that “nothing an author
produces … comes from anywhere but within, and thus there must be one among [her]
personae—even if not the everyday one—whose life is in fact being written in [her]
Atwood returns to images of the uncanny Other in her interview with Eleanor Wachtel
and suggests how the recognition of the author in her fiction is a false perception that
covers up the fact that readers are “really recogniz[ing] themselves” (“Margaret Atwood”
195). Here, the implication is that Atwood’s violent woman is less a window into the
The cultural renegotiations over the meaning and relevance of violence are
perhaps most explicitly revealed in a fifth way that critics have read Atwood’s harmful
women. Imagining events of female brutality as a source of instruction and the violent
woman as a didactic figure, many critics have placed a positive valence on Atwood’s
female violence, while bearing in mind the negative and long-enduring effects such acts
can simultaneously incite. Responding to the epigraph of The Robber Bride, which claims
that “A rattlesnake that doesn’t bite teaches you nothing,” Howells observes that “Zenia
is more than a threat; she is also a teacher” (“The Robber Bride” 91), thereby bringing to
light the ways in which Zenia, as embodiment of both female and Canadian otherness,
forces her three female friends to identify the elements of alterity and foreignness also
states that her various invasions and harmful behaviors have “didactic and even
14
finds that accepting Zenia means learning to embrace “[one’s] own potential for hostility,
anger, and rage” (83), thereby indicating the critical intersections between viewing Zenia
as instructor and recognizing her as uncanny Other. Moreover, this critical tendency to
view Zenia as a didactic figure forces readers to carefully reconsider their beliefs and
“therapeutic,” in society. To what extent do the instructive lessons learned from violence
outweigh its deleterious effects? Who has the authority to condone certain forms of
violence over others? Who has been forcibly silenced in efforts to define “acceptable”
literature and society has provoked critics to view Atwood’s female violence in a sixth,
but certainly not final, 12 way that suggests how the violent woman reflects her
increasingly violent society. Critics offering this perspective configure the violent woman
as a social barometer and as a figure who, despite her often marginal status, lies at the
heart of her society in signaling its broader social currents. Cooke’s alignment of the
fictionalized representation of Grace Marks with the crimes and trial of Karla Homolka
reveals how Atwood’s violent female figures have been read as indicative of violent
trends in the society external to the fictional narrative, while other critics, such as Molly
Hite, perceive how violent women in Atwood’s fiction reflect the societal violence and
“universe of suffering” (“An Eye” 204) internal to the narrative. More precisely, Hite, in
her analysis of Cat’s Eye, finds that the “death of Elaine’s brother, Stephen, at the hands
hands of her purported [female] friends” (“An Eye” 191). Hite’s illuminating parallel not
15
only serves to indicate how the female violence Cordelia enacts against Elaine performs
as a criterion of broader social and political abuses, but further suggests that, in order to
survive and live with dignity in a society characterized by violence, females may feel
unanswered and many areas of inquiry unexamined. Despite the early recognition of
Atwood’s investment in social and humanitarian issues and the range of approaches that
critics have employed to examine female brutality, many critical gaps remain and the
general oversight of Atwood’s violent women is vastly incongruous with the numerous
and diverse examples of such women that Atwood offers throughout her writing. Perhaps
the most pressing concern made evident through the above overview of criticism is the
manner in which issues and images of female violence in Atwood have consistently
served as a secondary interest for critics. The oblique uses critics have hitherto made of
Atwood’s female violence while pursuing other issues suggest that women’s aggression
has not been regarded as a valuable critical pursuit in and of itself. What is lacking is an
offers important lessons and that resonates with pressing social, cultural and political
issues. Moreover, the cursory consideration that many critics have offered Atwood’s
violent women has prevented the development of a self-reflexive critical tradition within
which female violence can be examined. The dispersed attempts of critics to address
women’s aggression have neglected to build upon the groundwork of previous violence
scholars or to acknowledge the rich tradition of violent female figures within Atwood’s
16
corpus. Resultant from this negligence is a rhizomic patterning of violence studies that
converge on Atwood’s fiction, but that otherwise lack the coherence, perspective and
tradition fictionalizes, rather than humanizes, female brutality and typically fixes the
violent woman within the Gothic realm of the fantastic, in which divisions between the
real and the unreal are obscured and one is never certain if, when encountering the violent
woman, one is experiencing reality or has become “the victim of an illusion of the senses,
of a product of the imagination” (Todorov 25). Although the interstices between the
violent woman and Gothic conventions indicate the broader resonances female violence
creates in cultural discourses and Atwood’s engagement with literary traditions, there is a
vital need to secure the violent women within the realm of the real and the everyday
before or alongside attempts to evaluate her imaginative potential. Similar to critics who
women’s brutality a conceptual impossibility and ultimately a fiction rather than a fact,
efforts to understand the violent woman exclusively through literary conventions inhibit
our ability to see her as a fully human figure with diverse and often shifting allegiances
and motivations. Further, Atwood insistence that art is frequently engaged in “the
violation of conventions” (“The Ancient Mariner” 169) indicates the tendency of literary
works, and the lives they represent, to exceed the traditions that precede them.
the widely-adopted critical tendency to frame her as a figure of the uncanny, where in
17
doing so, critics often pursue ways of thinking about female aggression that detach a
fractured and severable aspect of female identity, rather than acknowledging the overlap
and continuity between women’s violent and non-violent selves. Risking the
compartmentalizing and fracturing of the female psyche, theories of the violent woman as
dark double typically overlook how a woman’s acceptance of her violent inclinations
often marks her movement towards psychic wholeness and, at times, her recognition of
her full creative capacities. 13 Not surprisingly, Atwood turns to Lewis Carroll’s Alice
Through the Looking Glass—which she insists is “always so useful in matters of the
subjectivity and its hazards. Endlessly used by writers, critics, and theorists alike to
examine issues such as language, the self and the Other, Carroll’s story is adopted by
Atwood to suggest the enlarged perspective and articulatory abilities Alice gains when
she foregoes destroying her mirror double and instead “merges with the other Alice”
before “return[ing] to the waking world” (Negotiating 56). In other words, Atwood
suggests that it is in accepting one’s full range of capacities, rather than repressing and
denying one’s less acknowledged aspects of self, that new beginnings are forged and new
violent women. In the absence of a firm critical foothold within Canadian and Atwoodian
discourses, one is left wondering where to begin. Turning to broader cultural discussions
18
outside of this study’s specific area of inquiry, one similarly encounters a daunting
contextualized and examined. The violent woman is, to adapt what has become a virtual
cliché, left without a sympathetic discursive space of her own within which she can
conceptual terrains, the violent woman is rendered vagrant, and even further alienated
from the advantages of having multiple, even contesting, sympathetic conceptual spaces
through which her identity can be negotiated as a site of intersecting personal and socio-
cultural forces. Calling into question Claudine Herrmann’s optimistic notion that “there is
a physical space and a mental space for everyone” (168), this study draws attention to
how broader cultural discourses outside of Atwoodian and Canadian scholarship have
such a way as to denaturalize women’s violent tendencies that Alix Kirsta insists “were
always there from the beginning, but which centuries of male dominance seemed to have
brutality has frequently been denied or cast as a pathological condition and, as such, has
been refused a hospitable conceptual terrain within which to understand, rather than
justify, women’s violence or a theoretical frame that would enable an examination of the
perpetuating this critical oversight. Despite the discourses of exclusion that have been
seminal to the feminist movement, and which have more recently proven useful to
feminist critics of various orientations as a diagnostic compass to pinpoint the race, class,
19
and sexual orientation biases operant within feminism itself, 14 feminist conversations
examining the violent woman alongside feminist precepts, possible reasons for this
debarment are illuminated, revealing how abusive women undermine some of the
traditional tenets of feminism which posit women as multiply inscribed victims and
resistance to this victimization. 15 The pervasive sense that discussing female violence is
politically disadvantageous for women and will be used to further oppress them has
victims, arguing their violence away” in order to “bring them back into the fold”
(Pearson 24). While attempts to respond to female violence bring to light the current
conceptual vagrancy of violent women, they further reveal the need for feminism to
remain flexible and adaptive in order to respond to the endless differences existent within
which to situate and evaluate Atwood’s violent women at the foremost signals the
difficulty of engaging the topic of violence, where any attempt to define the violent
impulse is an endeavor to contain and prescribe a reality that consistently eludes shape
and control. Those attempting to examine violence as it variously appears over time and
space are exasperated to find that they are left “with an almost undifferentiated and
abstract concept of violence” (McNaught 376) that fails to delimit its precise meaning, an
effect that many have assumed is due to the absence of reason in the violent act. Jalna
Hanmer and Sheila Saunders similarly find that “Defining violence is extremely difficult.
20
Reaching any agreement on a definition is even more difficult. Individual and collective
agreements about the use of violence in certain circumstances vary enormously when
confronted with specific situations” (30), suggesting that the evasive meaning of violence
has less to do with its irrationality than with the infinite number of variables surrounding
it. While our recognition of certain acts, responses, patterns, and symbols associated with
emotions generated in response to harm are widely variable. Vigdis Broch-Due argues
that the “shock and terror created by violence … seems [sic] to be an uncomplicated and
natural reaction to it but there are other residues of violence which are less immediate and
more ambiguous” (17), indicating how definitions of violence focusing exclusively on its
emotional “residues” are unreliable. More broadly, the codes used to discern violence are
continually changing, and it is not always clear to all participant in, or witness to, a
violent event when, where, or how an act of violence has taken place. Violence in all its
manifestations inherently creates an unstable and paranoid universe to the extent that it
undermines attempts to arrive at objective and accurate evaluations. Yet the violence
enacted by women in particular has been neglected due to the culture of denial
surrounding women’s capacity to do harm. Similar to Betty Friedan and her identification
of the restlessness and discontent of many middle-class and educated women in the 1960s
as “the problem that has no name” (15), Atwood in her writing of women’s violence aims
to “name the hitherto unnamed” (Negotiating xx) and to reconsider the traditional
superiority, the proliferation of life, and witnesses to and victims of violence, female
21
brutality is an unsettling reality that many have denied and that “often goes unspoken and
is, perhaps, ‘unspeakable,’ represent[ing] the darkest, deepest fears of the male order”
matter” (de Lauretis 251), women are further imagined as static and thoroughly
embodied, and thus incapable of the transmutations of identity that are assumed
necessary to shift from mother to murderer, or from victim to victimizer. While cultural
attempts to force a procrustean image onto women have led to an intemperate denial of
female brutality and a blindness that obscures those behaviors that transgress the margins
of the “womanly possible,” the acknowledgements of female violence that have been
made have often been couched in a rhetoric that achieves the identical effect of negating
female violence. Like Davey in his early reading of Life Before Man, many cultural
critics have defined female brutality as the violent woman’s borrowing of an essentially
masculine behavior, rather than seeing her as instantiating a violence of her own. Naomi
Segal, in suggesting that “violence is always by men (is, rather, an act in the masculine
position)” (142), demonstrates how women’s natural use of violence has often been
see how women partake in violence as women exposes a conceptual gap created through
restrictive gender discourses, and poses the further, and perhaps more grievous, problem
women internalize society’s denial of female brutality, Phyllis Chesler posits that
although many women engage in forms of cruelty, “most women will not readily admit,
even to themselves, that they have behaved badly” (Woman’s Inhumanity 50).
22
Further exemplifying the lack of a hospitable conceptual terrain within which to
situate the violent woman and the on-going societal efforts to transform and render more
palatable aspects of female behavior that are incongruous with gender ideals, cultural
imaginings of, and responses to, the violent woman have often cast her as a pathological
aberration, rather than a demonstration of the wide range of human behaviors. 16 Since the
publication of Criminal Women, the Prostitute, and the Normal Woman in 1893, in which
Cesare Lombroso concludes that an “exaggerated eroticism” (185) in women causes them
to become hysterical and to behave in deviant and violent ways, representations of violent
women have frequently been encoded in the language and images of an excessive female
sexuality. 17 While contemporary critics, such as James Gilligan, have proposed the
psychopathology” (98) that emerges from, and in turn helps create, various psycho-social
and biological systems, the construction of violence as pathology has been most
extensively applied to women and modified to align with, and further mystify, women’s
sexuality: the domain of female subjectivity that has always been most threatening to
society and its stability. Refuting cultural assumptions that imagine women’s brutality as
traditional perception of sexuality as the “arena in which women express their wildness”
(Hendin 201). Beyond the moral dilemmas raised through this provocative aestheticizing
of more than their vestments in diminishing their ethical responsibility. As such, societal
23
assumptions of the violent woman’s abnormality bring to the fore both questions about
women’s agency in harm, and indicate to Atwood how “Ways of going crazy are
women, and its reluctance to provide a critical terrain for open and humanizing
myth that feminism’s liberation and empowerment of women is to blame for the rise in
Yet perhaps the more disconcerting aspect of feminism’s refusal to hospitably address
female violence is the extent to which this dismissal misaligns with feminism’s public
identity as a refuge for the voices of all women and the history of women’s
marginalization out of which the feminist movement has emerged. More precisely, one of
the seminal reasons for the rise of feminism is that women within patriarchy have always
been positioned as outsiders. While the expressed purpose of feminist criticism is both
“to counter the limitations of ad hominem [‘to the man’] thinking … by asking a series of
questions addressed ad feminam [‘to the woman’]” (Sandra Gilbert “Ad Feminam” xi)
and to “find and release” voices that have been “lost, ignored, denied, devalued, and
repressed” (Grace “In Search” 35), feminist discourses, in refusing to offer a critical
space within which to explore and understand the nature of a female violence, have in
acknowledged insistence that “Woman must write about women and bring women to
writing” (875) indicates the feminist awareness of how the inability to represent a
24
concept textually prevents its political representation, thus making feminism’s oversight
of the pressing need to develop a critical and theoretical vocabulary to examine female
its human dimensions, within the discursive terrain of feminism is not indicative of
feminism’s careless negligence. Rather, it indicates the ways in which abusive women
inhabit a subject position that both runs contrary to feminism’s rejection of violence and
that challenges specific ideological tenets of feminism that construct women as victims
and global “sisters.” As such, Kirsta’s earlier cited understanding that violence has been
failure to note how women have similarly been participant in obscuring women’s
constructed by feminists as antithetical to their pacifist objectives and to their belief that
“self-affirmation can truly arise only out of creation, not out of destruction” (Hughes
286). While feminist critics are increasingly recognizing how women have made
punctuated use of violence and militancy in furthering feminist causes, 20 the inception of
Bomb”) and anti-war movements. From the proto-feminist national women’s group
Voice of Women (VOW), established in 1960 to bring provincial and federal attention to
women’s issues, anti-militarism and peace activism, to later feminist initiatives such as
Women’s Action for Peace, developed in 1982 following a Women and Militarism
25
aggression” (Sangarasivam 64). In “Uglypuss,” Atwood’s description of the phrase
“Women make love. Men make war” (77) inscribed onto the women’s bathroom wall
addresses this limited understanding of violence and gender, and suggests that feminists
who hold such beliefs are supported by a broader community of women who attempt to
dissociate themselves from harmful behaviors. Clearly, for many feminists, women’s use
and the replacement of one tyrant with another, indicating both the continuity between
feminism and other cultural conversations that identify violence as coded masculine and
the essential paradox of female violence within feminist discourses. That is, female
brutality has been both negated (because all violence is always already male) and
conceptions of women as victims. In describing elements of the “victim culture” (4) that
she finds surrounds women, Kirsta notes the cries of “feminist outrage that greet any
suggestion that women may have an equal tendency to violence” (5). 21 Often
constructing woman as a Persephone-like figure, many, but certainly not all, feminist
critics have imagined victimhood as the common and irreducible identity of all women
who live within androcentric societies and whose identity has left them vulnerable to
race, class, and/or sexual orientation prejudices. As a seemingly inescapable base identity
for women within feminism, victimhood serves as a platform that legitimizes women in
their battle against various forms of oppression and paradoxically empowers women by
26
providing them with the grounds and motivation for resistance, yet at the same time
presumptively brands all women as indisputable victims. While this discussion does not
disclaim the widespread discriminations and the various abuses women have endured as a
about the essential experience of all women and the need to discriminately assign the
status of victim. Astrid Henry has recently made note of this concern in identifying the
Morgan and Andrea Dworkin that assumes women’s victimization from a vast array of
victim feminism has not only left feminists with no vocabulary to describe women whose
personal and public identities do not emerge from, or necessarily respond to, the
Challenging the feminist tendency to regard women as always already victims, the
violent woman rewrites scripts of femininity and typically rejects the “victim mythology”
that Rene Denfeld feels “has become the subtext of the [feminist] movement”
(“Feminists” 57). Women whose violence stems neither from a sense of oppression nor
from a history of victimization confound the rhetoric of feminism and signal the need to
of often conflicting subject positions. More specifically, in exposing the often shifting
identities of women between the roles of victim and victimizer, violent women trouble
27
societal beliefs in women’s static and formulaic relationship to violence, and, according
to Atwood, force a recognition of the “full range of [women’s] response to the world”
(“Tightrope-Walking” 220). Expanding on this idea, Atwood further explains that true
equally good” (“Margaret Atwood’s Address”). The feminist fear that a critical focus on
women’s violence will detract attention away from the “real” oppression enacted by
patriarchal agents and institutions is not only unfounded, but further restricts women’s
participation in the real, a limitation that feminism for decades has striven to overcome.
level, the role of victims and are often required to bear the marks of man’s violent
potential without the possibility of demonstrating their own. Destabilizing this idea of an
authoritative and original oppressor, violent women expose how violence is much more
degrees not only justifies in absolute terms the existence of feminism itself, but reinforces
sisterhood provides them with a means to resist their victimization. The fabled sisterhood
women, 23 and has inspired ambitious collections of feminist criticism such as Sisterhood
is Global: The International Women’s Movement Anthology (1984), which espouse the
idea of all women’s “same basic story” (Morgan 36). Combating the marginal status
28
empowering and self-supporting (yet ultimately imagined) community that holds women,
their interests, and their experiences at its center. Chesler recalls her early encounters
with the typically “ecstatic rhetoric” of sisterhood, yet further recollects the sense of fear
in which notions of sisterhood were conceived, and later perpetuated: “we knew that we
were doomed without sisterhood so we proclaimed it, even in its absence. We wanted to
will it into existence, verbally, without wrestling it into being” (Woman’s Inhumanity 27).
Chesler’s revealing retrospection both offers insight into the challenges limiting the
achievement of an idealistic goal and suggests how notions of sisterhood belie the
against other women. While recent feminist critics have done invaluable and extensive
and celebrated within feminist communities, the violent woman who victimizes other
women creates a rupture in the feminist dream of solidarity that goes beyond social,
reality that all women are capable of enacting violence in some form upon other women.
Undermining the feminist belief in women’s easy and seemingly natural connections with
one another, the violent woman typically evokes anxiety despite, or on account of, her
“deny what women know: that [they] can be spiteful, mean, and malicious” (Laura Tracy
191). Sarah Sceats discerns that, in Atwood’s fiction in particular, women are often
29
“downright abusive” (119) to one another and that it is this harm, rather than sisterhood,
that is naturalized, indicating how, “women are cruel, people are cruel, and this … can be
perfectly routine” (116). Yet women’s frequent targeting of close female relations, rather
than distant or unacquainted ones, in acts of brutality suggests that it is often through
sisterhood are to an extent confirmed and denied through female violence, and it becomes
clear that it is not sisterhood in its entirety that must be abandoned in the face of female
brutality, but the connotations it carries of women’s uniformly nurturing and empowering
interactions with one another. While Virginia Woolf, in 1929, brought to light the
importance of creating a literary space to discuss women’s friendships and how “Chloe
liked Olivia” (A Room 89), feminist critics are now faced with the need to examine the
While Roz’s recollection in The Robber Bride of the phrase “‘The Other Woman
will soon be with us’” as something “the feminists used to say” (455) initially appears to
suggest feminists’ desire to unconditionally accept marginalized and “Other” women into
sororial circles, the mantra more accurately reflects how this inclusion is predicated on
the veritable erasure of difference and on the transformation of the marginalized woman
into a woman like “us.” That is, into someone who aligns with feminist ideology. The
understand her as she is, further indicates how women’s violence radically interrupts the
practices of feminism behind the front of familial metaphors. More significant, however,
is recognizing how the consequences of this exclusion are far from one-sided. Given the
30
absence of an arena in which to negotiate their identity, literary representations of violent
women are left without critical paradigms and a distinctive vocabulary that would both
illuminate the motivations guiding female brutality and facilitate public recognition of the
prevalence of female violence and its connections to natural, and at times normative, 24
human behavior. Similarly, feminism’s failure to offer a discursive space in which issues
of female brutality can be more fully examined insulates feminist discourses from the
valuable lessons produced through disparity and the new ways of thinking often garnered
women, since those relegated to the margins can indeed reveal much about the nature of
any collectivity and the various biases and gaps it conceals. Violent women, in exposing
both the complications of widely applying notions of victimhood and the limits of
feminism’s foundational tenets, and to bring them into alignment with the full reality of
women’s lives.
In response to the crisis of paradigms surrounding violent women and the lack of
empathetic critical spaces within which to understand and examine, rather than encourage
or condone, female brutality, there has been a gradual expansion of violence definitions
and a discernible attempt to look outside of existing paradigms to address how women fit
within violence discourses and how “the harm done [by women] is real” (Chesler,
Woman’s Inhumanity 44). Rather than dwelling upon the evasive nature of violence in
general and risk perpetuating the oversight of violent women, or offering oblivious non
sequiturs that deny the existence of female brutality, many critics have begun to offer
innovative ways of thinking about violence. Aiming to move beyond the definitions
31
offered by critics such as Rene Denfeld, who appears to have fallen behind the times in
asserting that “the word violence is used to describe destructive, pointless aggression”
(Kill the Body 7), and Darlene Lawson, who offers a limited definition of female violence
as “reactive, spontaneous and not conscious” (138), Linda Bell broadens understandings
as the coercion itself, the control exerted by someone over the will, intellect, or limbs of
another” (161). Beyond reminding us that the meaning of violence is socially constructed,
Bell’s definitive statement recognizes the intentionality and power relations behind acts
of violence, yet it also illuminates the wide variety of physical and non-physical acts that
can be regarded as violent behaviors. Similarly exposing the paradox of how expanding
definitions allows us to articulate the nature of violence with more precision, Elaine
Scarry asserts that “everything is a [potential] weapon” (41), including words and
tools and contexts of brutality and brings us closer to perceiving the veritable diversity of
violent agents and acts. The various efforts to expand definitions of violence beyond the
realms of the nonsensical, the physical and the masculine allow us to read and recognize
alternative modes of violence and to render visible previously indiscernible acts of female
brutality.
In her interview with Geoff Hancock, Atwood similarly reveals her participation
in extending cultural definitions and inciting her readers to perceive their surroundings in
32
language” (200). Echoing, or perhaps inspiring, critical efforts to transgress constrictive
definitions of cultural terms, Atwood insists on the tendency of semantics to shift and
undergo change, and she views it as the writer’s responsibility to aid this process by
making new patterns from old language, 25 since it is only through the expansion or re-
arrangement of a language, such as the combining of the terms “female” and “violence,”
that we can align our idiom with reality and “get the words to stretch and do something
investigates this matter in identifying how a societal reality, such as female violence, can
exist even if “We don’t have [a word for] that concept” (“Using What You’re Given”
141); here, Atwood suggests that the writer’s responsibility is, in part, to create terms to
describe her continually changing environment, or expand existing terms to encompass it.
At the center of Atwood’s fictional work is a message conveying the power of words to
change our understanding of our world, and the need to see beyond our present language.
shared interest in this goal, this study focuses on four interconnected modes of female
indirect violence, and self-directed violence. Yet a discussion of these varying forms of
brutality must be preceded by a few important provisos. While acutely aware of the
conceptual tyranny that can result from the imposition of titles, and the limitations
necessity of applying the title of violence to certain female behaviors due to the harmful
and often long-enduring consequences that such actions entail, the social resonance
carried by the term “violence” that confers a degree of gravity to actions affiliated with it,
33
and the productive dissonance this term multiply generates when juxtaposed with the
descriptive “female.” Further, this discussion does not propose an essentialist argument
subjectivity. 26 Rather, the four types of violence proposed reveal how all humans are
capable of participating in modes of violence, and how women in Atwood’s fiction have
tended towards specific ways of engendering violence that at times align with, yet at
reflects Scarry’s belief in the pervasiveness of weaponry by revealing how words can
become tools of violence. While verbal attacks targeting a victim’s sense of selfhood,
security, and well-being are frequently referred to as “verbal abuse” or, as Elaine in Cat’s
Eye terms it, “verbal danger” (234), there has hitherto been a widespread reluctance to
associate such behaviors with acts of violence because they are unlikely to result in
severe physical injury or bodily death. 27 In not leaving behind physical scars,
psychological violence is both assumed to occur without real harm and is currently
exempted from criminal codes of abuse in Canada. 28 Yet Jo Freeman’s account of how an
whipping” (217), Chesler’s observation that “verbal abuse, coupled with social ostracism,
can damage girls in a lasting way” (Death 41), and Natalie Angier’s pronouncement that
“the most piercing and persistent tools” of female violence are “psychological tools”
(269) insist on the identification of psychological abuse as a form of violence and a mode
of brutality that is not wholly distinguishable from acts of physical harm. In the words of
Joan in Lady Oracle, “Words [are] not a prelude to war but the war itself” (57). Similarly,
34
Charis’s explanation in The Robber Bride of the pain resultant from Zenia’s intentionally
abusive words, in which she felt “as if a net of hot sharp wires [were] being pulled tight
around her, the hairline burns cutting into her skin” (495), indicates how psychological
violence can often be experienced as a direct attack on the body. Highlighting Atwood’s
belief that “The most lethal weapon on earth is the human mind” (“Canadian-American”
391), such examples suggest how women’s harmful utterances urge a reconsideration of
violence and how the points of contact between individuals are not exclusively physical.
This inclination to equate psychological violence with physical acts is both one
of central importance for many Atwood critics, such as Grace, who finds that in
(“Articulating” 13), and one that necessitates further consideration to the extent that it
acts of psychological abuse use harmful words to transgress the surface of the victim’s
body, where such utterances perform as a weapon and self-extension of the victimizer
that allows her to project her presence beyond the immediate space occupied by her body
and into the interior of her victim to act upon his/her perceptions and affects. 29 In other
words, both psychological and physical violence enact a violation of the victim’s bodily
boundaries, act upon sentient surfaces, and engender a variable degree of suffering and
distress in the victim. Yet the characteristics that distinguish psychological violence from
physical harm, most notably the lack of tangible marks and surface scars in the former,
are the very characteristics that ensure its brutality; in lacking a physical sign,
psychological abuse is typically repeated by the victimizer in order to ensure her message
35
discount because they are not visually startling, the very real harm enacted by
violence disrupts the notion of the female body as ornament and a surface that is acted
upon, as well as the social lessons instilled in women to avoid displays of anger and
hostility. Angier asserts that from girlhood, “Physical aggression [in women] is
discouraged … in manifold and aggressive ways. Not only are they instructed against
offensive fighting; they are rarely instructed in defensive fighting” (265). 30 The pervasive
bias against women’s ability or inclination to enact physical violence and the masculine
bias of criminological descriptions of assault signal the cultural and legal factors enabling
a denial of female violence and the need to deconstruct social scripts defining gender
harm, the fact remains that violence is not an inherently male behavior; women, in acting
as women, use their bodies and physical weapons as tools that can be used against men,
other women, themselves and non-human life forms. Before women can be understood as
fully human, they must be recognized for the ways in which they have used their bodies
in variously, and even simultaneously, productive and destructive, loving and hurtful
ways. The challenge of viewing women’s physical violence as co-existing with, rather
than contradicting, a variety of other female subject positions, such as mother, wife,
sister, and daughter, also marks the goal of recognizing how a woman’s life is never told
experiences.
36
The behaviors that fall under the third category of women’s indirect violence
reveal how violent behaviors have not always been as direct as psychological violence, or
as explicit as physical violence. While the term “indirect” may initially suggest an act
that is unintended or accidental, indirect violence here describes a violent act that aims to
harm another in either physical or psychological ways through the actions of one or more
through coercion or persuasion to carry out acts of direct harm on another, and also by
larger scale operatives such as governmental and corporate violence, 31 indirect violence
enables women to remain anonymous and invisible. Extending from what women know,
indirect forms of violence build upon women’s cultural education that teaches them to
achieve power indirectly and through their affiliations, rather than in a more immediate
effectiveness of indirect violence “is tied to the fluency of a person’s social intelligence”
(Angier 266). Despite the seeming obscurity of such contrived acts of violence, the
pervasiveness of this type of brutality in Atwood’s fiction and Atwood’s own sense that
girls are given greater opportunities “to be more manipulative and conspiratorial and
Machiavellian” (“Beaver’s Tale” 159) indicates the frequency and facility with which
women “camouflage their intent to hurt others” (Jack 4) and deliver their violence in
covert ways.
Insisting that women’s indirect violence is more than petty hostility and holds the
capacity to effect great harm, Chesler maintains that “Gossip can break one’s heart and
spirit. Gossip can also lead to ‘social’ death and, sometimes, even to physical death”
(Woman’s Inhumanity 156), reflecting the nascent societal understandings of such acts as
37
violence that is made manifest in phrases such as “vicious rumors.” The unfair fighting
grounds typically created in indirect violence, wherein the victim is generally not
anticipating an attack, and may initially be unaware that one is occurring, mark the
defenselessness of the victim exposed to this type of violence, and thus her/his increased
her indirect violence is disarming to her victim and disguises the violent woman’s
underlying intent to harm her victim and to manipulate and control her agents. Similar to
psychological and physical violence, in which the self is extended through voice and
violence as an act of self-extension by revealing how the bodies, behaviors, and voices of
others can serve to increase the reach of an abusive individual, while placing such
“learn that a safe way to attack someone else is behind her back, so that she will not
know who is responsible” (Chesler Woman’s Inhumanity 76), the harm enacted by
indirect violence and the understanding of such behaviors as acts of the violent woman’s
self-extension, rather than her self-extrication, call for accountability to be placed upon
the orchestrating figure behind such acts of indirection. 32 Through this placing of blame
and responsibility, the mechanics of indirect violence are rendered visible and the abusive
woman is forced to reckon with the veritable harm she has engendered.
remote from the victim is the fourth type of violence highlighted by this study, in which
the perpetrator and the victim are the selfsame. The surprising prevalence of women who
38
perpetuating the culture of silence that has come to surround the topics of suicide and
Miller, a woman who self-injures “acts against herself in the role of the abuser” (72).
self-destructive acts and the deeply aversive responses they frequently elicit, which
comprehension and rational response” (Favazza 4). Gavin Fairbairn similarly points to
the “poverty of our language for discussing suicidal harm” (xiii), thereby exposing the
destructive acts to a more familiar social phenomenon, we can begin to create spheres of
meaning around acts of suicide and self-mutilation where before there were fear and
reticence. 35 That others throughout history have similarly discerned the value of viewing
self-harm as violence, including Dante Alighieri, who claims that violence done to
“ourselves” is one of the “three ways violence is shown” (Canto xi:29), 36 Immanuel
Kant, who characterizes suicide as a violence against ourselves (53), Terence O’Keeffe,
who similarly identifies the act as one of “self-killing” (47), and Alfred Alvarez, who
traces the etymology of the term to its derivative roots that reflect suicide as a form of
homicide and which evince “the associations with murder” (45), suggests how there is
appropriate terms already present in critical discourse. Moreover, while violence, as this
discussion has shown, carries it own hermeneutic challenges, the theoretical framing of
39
violence offered through this study can be similarly applied to gestures of self-injury to
surrounding women’s violence and to provide an overarching framework for the four
(36) and an act which is “richly communicative” (244), 38 and extending the observations
of Neil Whitehead, who identifies “the role violence can play as meaningful cultural
expression” (41), this study imagines the communicatory capacities of female violence as
one way among many of approaching female brutality and as a productive start to further
entail a sender and a receiver of a message, thus creating a valuable space for the
female violence and what Vanessa Friedman identifies as women’s lack of access to “a
public language which may accurately and satisfactorily express their needs and desires,
one that is accepted and understood by the masculine social order” (66). For some, the
alignment of violence with communication may at first seem an absurd attempt to bridge
a vast gulf between widely dissimilar concepts resulting in the obscuring of brutality
behind the façade of a benign and familiar activity. Yet the cost of not explicating female
40
violence through an everyday conceptual frame, and thereby keeping such violence
within the realm of the exceptional and deviant, suggest how the avoidance of such a
undermining both cultural images of the violent woman as a lone figure by examining her
behavior, further indicates how the nature of violence is not self-evident and how
brutality is always more than an act of destruction. Imagining female violence as an act
undertaken by a woman in her effort to create and convey an infinite variety of meanings
requires recognizing the connection that exists between generation and devastation.
Joan’s witnessing in Lady Oracle how physical abuse can perform as “an open and direct
method of expressing your feelings” (247) and Lorna Irvine’s observation of “the tension
between destruction and creation” (“One Woman” 101) existent in Power Politics and
You Are Happy mark how this sense of the equivocating and ambivalent nature of
violence aligns well with the individual stories and broader thematics of Atwood’s work.
us to view the violent woman as one who struggles against disorder in her effort to create
meaning, yet in doing so burdens her words and gestures with a secondary effect in which
they perform as vehicles of harm, thereby destabilizing the division between creation and
irreparable harm, this positioning of violence as an act that stems from a desire for
communication insists on the need to regard violence as a deeply human behavior and
accounts for the diversity and fluidity of the violent act that other conceptual approaches
41
disallow. Similar to the multivalent nature of Atwood’s own textual constructions of
brutality, in which violence is depicted alongside meaningful messages that indicate her
refusal to “put [the reader] through a lot of blood and gore for nothing” (“Using What
You’re Given” 151), the locutionary intent behind most acts of female violence signals
how destruction is intimately connected with an expressive power and how “language is
drawing attention to the interrelations the violent woman attempts to establish with her
illuminate the connection Atwood strives to create with her readers. Building on the work
of previous critics who have interpreted the violent woman in Atwood’s fiction as a
figure who reflexively comments on issues central to her society, this study focuses on
inadequate social narratives and creates a space for their revision. More precisely, while
bellicose women are typically relegated to the margins of the social body on account of
the harmful behaviors they enact, such women’s proclivity for dramatically revising
simultaneous eccentricity and centricity. To the extent that such figures embody the
characteristics of the Möbius strip and the Klein bottle that Atwood highlights in Cat’s
Eye (218), which Elaine finds radically destabilize the division between inside and
42
outside positionalities, the violent woman occupies a privileged space in Atwood’s fiction
through her violent women, the use of violent behaviors as communicative means by
characters inside Atwood’s texts typically results in misconstrued meaning, and the
perpetuation of confusion between the victimizer and victim. Atwood’s exasperation with
motives” (“The Curse” 221) illustrates the need to recognize how a woman’s motivation
for violence is not always the desire for violence itself, but the impulse to express an
infinitely variable number of emotions, thoughts, and sentiments. However, the lack of a
shared cultural language matching stable and specific meanings to particular acts of
violence prevents the abusive act from performing as a credible, or effective, mode of
communication between the violent woman and her victim. The same violent act may be
used repeatedly by a character, yet the meaning intended behind each act is likely to shift
with each consecutive use with no observable indication of the semantic change that has
taken place, rendering violence an act that does not always mean what it says and that
does not refer to a stable code that would allow other characters to discern its meaning.
Indicating how the principles of semiology extend to all processes and forms of
recognition that brutality is a subjectively coded act and that the signifier of female
43
violence is without a corresponding stable signified element. Cultural phrases describing
violence as an “inexplicable” and “senseless” act reveal that while violence may be
intended as a means of communication, and may even achieve this aim on the
metatextual plane, on the textual level it remains an unstable signifier that is both
disjoined from its intended symbolic meaning and widely received by other characters as
following a thematic structure that aligns with what Hendin identifies as the “gathering of
energies and arguments that, taken together, seize control of the subject of female
aggression” (2). More precisely, chapter two examines the various mythologies that
define Canada and its people, and how the violent woman troubles these mythologies by
Through an examination of Surfacing alongside “The Man From Mars,” “Uglypuss,” and
“Hairball,” this chapter exposes how the violent woman re-defines the Canadian
imaginary to include those aspects that Canadians have long overlooked or learned to
mis-recognize in themselves. The third chapter moves away from this focus on national
narratives to highlight the discourses that similarly shape our understanding of art, and
those who participate in it. Here, the violent woman can be seen to engage in revisionary
work by exposing the limits of the Red Shoes Syndrome that has in many ways come to
define the fraught connection between the female artist and her art. In several of
Atwood’s artist fictions, including Lady Oracle, Cat’s Eye and The Blind Assassin, the
female protagonist is able to evade the self-directed violence anticipated by this social
44
narrative through the use of projective strategies, indicating how the capacity for
divergent thought can be helpful, rather than harmful, to women and the failure of
conceptual frameworks to pre-determine the fate of the individual artist. The final chapter
(“Preserving” 32) and the mythic revisions in Atwood’s The Penelopiad and The Tent in
order to highlight the veritable range of female violence and the possibility, and at times
“Myths have a role to play in ethics” (15) by providing an arena to contemplate difficult
questions, this chapter arrives at the observation that Atwood’s myths value moral
multiplicity over singular or final solutions, and invite readers to see how individual
moral stances are inadequate to address the complex situations arising from acts of
female violence. Collectively, these discussions indicate how Atwood, far from offering
the violent woman as a panacea to the social problems represented in her fiction, draws
on the instability rendered by such figures to propose how there is value in imagining
women otherwise, and how female violence reflexively comments on the society within
which it is situated.
Notes
1
For example, Catherine Rainwater asserts that Joan’s attacking of the reporter at the end
of Lady Oracle is a demonstration of her “physical power” and her “refus[al] to be a
physical victim” (25), while Frank Davey identifies Joan as a figure of “excessive
sentimentality” whose assault is a part of the denouement that leaves Joan “in a deeply
flawed male world” (59) of the “Gothic plot formula” (60), thus illustrating the vastly
incongruous interpretations surrounding Atwood’s violent women and the unsettled
critical frames within which they have been placed.
2
See Atwood’s interview with James McElroy in Waltzing Again (169).
3
For an elaboration on this distinction, see Atwood’s interview “Defying Distinctions.”
45
4
Also see note 33.
5
These categories of violence, as may be expected, are not mutually exclusive. Rather,
they frequently intersect with one another in Atwood’s fiction, thereby revealing the
multidimensionality of her violence representations.
6
Also see René Girard (257) and Vigdis Broch-Due (2, 18-19).
7
In addressing the notion of free will, Atwood explains that “everyone’s choices are
limited, and women’s choices have been more limited than men’s, but that doesn’t mean
women can’t make choices” (“Spotty-Handed” 168).
8
The closest approximation of a definition of violence in the Canadian Criminal Code is
found in Sections 265-268, which offer legal definitions of various forms of “Assault,”
but make no mention of the term “violence.” Moreover, “violence” has been used to
define various criminal acts, such as “Homicide” (Section 222), “Robbery” (Section
343), “Intimidation” (Section 423) and “Serious Personal Injury Offence” (Section 752),
yet no precise definition is offered to the term itself.
9
For example, Sandra Djwa’s “Deep Caves and Kitchen Linoleum: Psychological
Violence in the Fiction of Alice Munro” extends understandings of violence to non-
corporeal realms by maintaining that violence can be psychological and that enemies can
enact harm in non-physical ways.
10
Lorna Irvine similarly characterizes Zenia in The Robber Bride as a “vampire
character” who “sucks the life out of the novel’s male characters” (“Recycling” 205).
11
See Atwood’s comic “The Radio Interview” (reprinted in Nischik “Murder in the
Dark” 4), in which she satirizes the tendency of critics to imagine her resemblance to her
fictional creations.
12
Individual critics have additionally approached Atwood’s violent women in a number
of idiosyncratic ways, such as aligning her with fairy tale conventions (Rigney 65), and
animalistic behaviors (Hollis 126).
13
See Dana Crowley Jack’s Behind the Mask and Kirsta’s Deadlier Than the Male (17).
14
In particular, see Adrienne Rich’s “Notes toward a Politics of Location,” in which she
delineates the ways in which white Western feminists have marginalized other
demographics of women, leading her to call for feminism to “de-Westernize itself” (225).
15
This focus on feminism’s construction of women’s victimhood and sororial
connections is not intended as a reductive attempt to narrow the widely ranging interests
of feminism to a few manageable tenets, but rather an effort to begin a critical discussion
of the ways in which women’s violence sits uncomfortably with certain feminist precepts.
16
See Chesler’s Woman’s Inhumanity to Women (35-77).
17
Also see Martha McCaughey and Neal King’s (Eds) Reel Knockouts: Violent Women
in the Movies.
1818
While Atwood has, in the past, been variously hailed as a leading proponent of
feminist issues in Canada, and adopted by the feminist movement as a figurehead, the
failure of feminist discourses to create a conceptual space for Atwood’s violent women is
reflected by critics such as Gayle Greene, who finds that Cat’s Eye “repudiates the
feminist terms that might make sense of the tale it tells” (201) and Shirley Neuman, who,
while acknowledging Offred’s violent impulses, views such violence, and The
Handmaid’s Tale as a whole, as reflective of the “[negative] reactions to the successes of
the women’s movement” (859) in the early 1980s.
46
19
See Alder’s Sisters in Crime: The Rise of the New Female Criminal.
20
In particular, see Ruth Roach Pierson’s “Global Issues” (385-388), and Carol Ehrlich’s
Socialism, Anarchism and Feminism, in which Ehrlich maintains that “Anything less than
a direct attack on upon all the conditions of our lives is not enough” (28) and that the
“essential tasks in the building of a new and truly human world” include “Destroy[ing]
capitalism. End[ing] patriarchy. Smash[ing] heterosexism” (29).
21
Also see Rene Denfeld’s Kill the Body, the Head Will Fall (101-108).
22
Henry borrows the term “victim feminism” from Naomi Wolf who, in Fire With Fire:
The New Female Power and How It Will Change the 21st Century, suggests its opposition
to an emerging “power feminism.”
23
The image of women’s sisterhood was perhaps first made widely available to women
through the publication of Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique (1963), which marked
the movement away from the mentality of first-generation feminists and their focus on
the individual woman and her particular oppressions and towards an imagining of
women’s shared consciousness and the limitations experienced en masse by an entire
generation of young, white middle-class women in 1950s and 1960s America.
24
In his discussion of Bodily Harm, Frank Davey observes that Rennie, as a result of her
hard-learned girlhood lessons, has grown into a woman who is able to be in and look at
the world without making physical contact with it (70). Expanding on this observation, it
is possible to see how certain forms of female abusiveness, such as psychological and
indirect violence, are responsive to society’s lessons of femininity.
25
See Atwood’s interview with Karla Hammond in Margaret Atwood: Conversations
(112).
26
Atwood’s own avoidance of gender essentialism is made evident in her assertion that
androgyny “certainly exists” (“Preserving Mythologies” 31), and in her insistence that,
when discussing female characters, she is not dealing with “members of a separate
species” (“A Question” 54).
27
An exception to this critical misunderstanding is Davey, who notes how the “violence”
exemplified in Power Politics is one of “psychological abuses” (Margaret Atwood 27),
thus revealing his awareness of how Atwood is employing images of violence in
unconventional and expanded ways.
28
While Section 264 of the Canadian Criminal Code indicates that “Uttering threats” is a
form of assault, this section further specifies that it is only those threats which give
warning of either “death or bodily harm,” or damage to another’s “real or personal
property,” that are punishable by law.
29
Scarry’s definition of the weapon as “an object that goes into the body and produces
pain” (56) reveals how harmful words received and internalized by a victim can, and
should, be included under the conceptual category of “weapon.”
30
Dana Crowley Jack similarly notes how “many women incorporate cultural myths that
women are not aggressive while their own experience contradicts it” (7).
31
For a definition of corporate violence see Walter DeKeseredy and Ronald Hinch’s
Woman Abuse: Sociological Perspectives (100).
32
The Canadian Criminal Code similarly finds the individual arranging acts of indirect
harm accountable for the harm incurred when, in Section 265 subsection 1, it states that
“A person commits an assault when, without the consent of another person, he applies
47
force intentionally to that other person, directly or indirectly” (emphasis added).
Similarly for homicide, Section 222 subsection 1 states that “A person commits homicide
when, directly or indirectly, by any means, he causes the death of a human being”
(emphasis added).
33
Acts of self-harm in Atwood’s fiction include: the suicidal thoughts of all the female
characters in Life Before Man, Yvonne in “The Sunrise” (Bluebeard’s Egg), Joanne in
“True Trash” (Wilderness), Portia in “Wilderness Tips” (Wilderness), and the first-person
narrator in “Weight” (Wilderness); the anorexic eating patterns of Marian in The Edible
Woman, the narrator of Surfacing, and Robyn in “Spring Song of the Frogs”
(Bluebeard’s); the self-destructiveness of Bo’s female lover in “Hair Jewelry” (Dancing),
the narrator’s mother in “Bring Back Mom” (Tent), Gloria in The Robber Bride, Lizzie in
Moral Disorder, Elaine in Cat’s Eye, Joan in Lady Oracle, and Iris in The Blind Assassin;
the possible suicides of Zenia at the end of The Robber Bride, and Lois’s childhood
friend Lucy in “Death by Landscape” (Wilderness); the suicides of Ofglen and Offred’s
predecessor in The Handmaid’s Tale, and Laura in The Blind Assassin.
34
While critics have commented on isolated instances of self-directed violence,
highlighting, for example, the “self-destruction that dominates [Life Before Man]”
(Hutcheon “From Poetic” 23), and Elaine’s decision in Cat’s Eye “to mutilate her own
body, tearing the skin from her feet” (White 162), there has been little effort to document,
or provide a nuanced critical frame for, the numerous distressing acts of female self-harm
that are woven throughout Atwood’s fiction, or to account for why some women are able
to overcome these behaviors.
35
Others have attempted to create meaning around gestures of self-harm by carrying over
the Victorian conception of suicide as a specifically “female malady.” For example,
Miller finds that women’s self-abuse responds to their socialization which has inculcated
them with the belief that “allowing themselves to be hurt or humiliated is far more
socially acceptable than being aggressive or violent toward others” (5), thereby
compelling women to “act out by acting in” (6). Margaret Higonnet similarly finds that
the “destructive narcissism [of suicide] seems to some particularly feminine” (69), thus
suggesting that self-destruction can be regarded as an act performed from the female
position.
36
Dante further argues that violence “To God … or neighbours may be done” (Canto
xi:31).
37
This theoretical framing, as will become clear, positions violence as a reflection of
broader social and cultural practices, as a paradoxical act of creation and destruction, and
as a deeply human act of attempted communication that can be engendered in
psychological, physical and indirect ways. In demonstrating the suitability of self-harm
within this theoretical frame, Mary Douglas, for instance, asserts that in acts of self-
mutilation “What is being carved in human flesh is an image of society” (143), and
Marilee Strong finds that “In addition to being a life-sustaining and sanity-maintaining
way of managing inner states, [self-] cutting is a primitive yet powerful form of
communication for people unable to adequately verbalize their feelings” (44). Strong’s
observation in particular deflates the common misperception that self-harm exclusively
signifies an individual’s attempts to destroy the self by exposing how such behaviors can
48
be paradoxically engendered as a means of self-preservation, thus signaling the diverse
intensions potentially driving self-injurious acts.
38
Also see Hendin’s The Heartbreaker Effect (36-44).
49
Chapter 2
Imaginary
although in every culture many stories are told, only some are told and retold, and …
in the spring of 1991, Margaret Atwood discusses the building of national mythologies
and prompts her listeners to re-examine a central Canadian emblem and their thoughts on
Canadian national identity by provocatively questioning, “You thought the national flag
was about a leaf, didn’t you? Look harder. It’s where someone got axed in the snow”
(Strange Things 14). Through this simple semiological exercise, Atwood invites a radical
she terms “the great Canadian victim complex” (Gibson 22) in order to reveal both the
capacity of Canadians to do harm to others and the violence that exists unremarked at the
through her brutality, points towards broader social trends and re-configures various
an individual who reconceptualizes the dominant national imaginary, or the limited set of
50
construct and maintain their sense of national identity, 40 may prima facie appear an
inconvenient and anomalous configuration. Yet Atwood, through this gesture, builds
upon long-established cultural frameworks linking the nation to gender and violence, not
only insisting on the enduring relevance of nationalism and national conceits, but also the
need to see the nation’s genius as a construct in constant flux. From Atwood’s Surfacing
(1972) to such short stories as “The Man From Mars” (1977), “Uglypuss” (1983), and
“Hairball” (1991), the violent woman uncovers how the reputed vulnerability,
multiculturalism, cooperative economy, and propriety central to the Canadian identity are
open to interrogation and re-interpretation; despite her marginal status within society, the
Canada’s central mythologies. What emerges from this critical endeavor is not a
reformed or corrective image of Canada’s national identity, since no singular figure can
possibly signify the cultural heterogeneity existent within a country, but recognition of
the need to “Look harder” and to question those national narratives that Canadians hold
at times contend with the self-effacing possibility that the very conceit they attempt to
analyze and delimit may in fact not exist at all. 41 One of the fundamental reasons for the
shifting conception of what constitutes nationhood; Philip Spencer and Howard Wollman
find that the “criteria for deciding on what constitutes a nation are highly contested,
involving complex issues relating to identity, culture, language, history, myth and
51
memory, and disputed claims to territory” (2) and Michael Ignatieff adds that “There is
only so much that can be said about nationalism in general. It is not one thing in many
disguises, but many things in many disguises” (9). Unlike a state, which concerns matters
of governmental jurisdiction, and the powers held by a polity over a defined geographic
area, a nation refers to the more abstract relations between people who envision
themselves as connected through time, space, and an underlying set of values and
principles, thereby highlighting the complex and recondite systems of meaning that
Yet it is despite, or perhaps due to, such evasiveness and impenetrability that
“chameleon quality of nationalism” that, for Sita Ranchod-Nilsson and Mary Ann
Tétreault, permits its being “couched in multiple and, at times, competing organizational
forms” (7). 42 The myth of a post-national world that was popularized in the years
following the Cold War, and which posited that the modern world had surmounted
tribalism and divisive religious and racial thinking, has been replaced with what many
have observed is a recent resurgence of nationalist sentiment. 43 Ignatieff and others, such
nationalist sentiment are particularly acute amongst those who feel their nation to be
imperiled, thereby suggesting a raison d’etre for the tendency towards and the durability
American cultural influences and threatened from within by unsettling ethnic conflicts,
including those between French, English, and Native populations, Canadian nationalist
values have frequently held centre stage within Canadian discourses and have been
52
championed by several influential cultural figures. Despite her depiction of Lesje’s and
herself has frequently voiced her support for, and allegiance to, the Canadian nation. 44
Claiming Canada as her own, Atwood explains that “Refusing to acknowledge where you
come from … is an act of amputation: you may become free floating, a citizen of the
world … but only at the cost of arms, legs or heart” (“Travels Back” 113). Frequently
has been placed by critics and the Canadian public into a metonymic relationship with
Canada, and while she may at times reject the title of “nationalist” for fear of appearing
an ideologue or having her novels mistaken for sermons (“Defying” 63), 46 she has been
awareness, has arguably held the greatest impact of all her works on the developing
early work of cultural criticism extends from the premise that national life generates a
community ethos marked by specific beliefs, values, and characteristics, and that “the
Reproducing and extending Canada’s symbolic heritage of “peace, order and good
the Charter’s implied contrast with the American ideals of “Life, Liberty and the pursuit
‘conquering’” (Survival 31) spirit native to the American genius. The essentially dialogic
53
nature of national identity that Atwood espouses suggests that gestures of self-recognition
are based on difference, and that establishing national identification in a cultural vacuum
is a difficult, if not impossible, task. The Hegelian dialectic of self and Other appears in
Atwood’s criticism when she locates qualities oppositional to, and thus stimulative of,
Canadian identity in the body of the national Other, and when she argues that “the reason
for wanting to have a Canada is that you do not agree with some of the political choices
that have been made by America and that you want to do it a different way” (“Where
common ways of being. Such rhetoric surfaces in George Grant’s discussion of how
Canadian reticence and “stodginess” have made Canada a society of greater “innocence
than the people to the south” (70), and in Katherine Morrison’s comparison of Canadian
and American cultural identities, in which she insists on a “traditional Canadian aversion
to using [violence] to solve problems or even to achieve worthy objectives” (245). 47 This
identification and, in many ways, this mythology of non-violence and mutualism has
come to underwrite other myths similarly central to the Canadian consciousness, such as
the valuing of ethnic tolerance and multiculturalism. While Atwood’s criticism and
and the vulnerability this frequently entails when one holds “a will to lose” (Survival 35),
her fictional writing complicates this uni-dimensional depiction of the Canadian ethos,
and the binary structures upon which it is premised. Within such imaginative spaces,
54
Atwood highlights the reductiveness of imagining Canadian identity as a negative, or of
defining Canada by what it is not, and explores the possibility that the differences marked
by national borders are not eroding, but never really existed. In her unsettling of national
mythologies, Atwood allows Canadians to see the violence they enact against others, and
even against their fellow citizens, under a myriad of guises, producing victims that are as
numerous as they are diverse. Such disruptions reveal how Canadians are not as
inculpable as they at times envision themselves to be and suggest the necessity of keeping
Recognizing the instability of nations and the collective identities they contain is
not only necessary before Canadians can perceive in themselves the violent potential they
synthetic construct and a processual, rather than static, entity. Benedict Anderson,
looking to print capitalism and shifting conceptions of time as the historic events
even the smallest nation will never know most of their fellow-members, meet them, or
even hear of them, yet in the minds of each lives the image of their communion” (15). In
addressing the critical oversights of Anderson’s theory and exposing the exclusivity of
race, class, and gender ideologies at the heart of such imagined communities, Tricia
Cusack both continues and disrupts Anderson’s ideas, arguing that “national culture is in
a sense a fiction, since the culture of any nation-state is likely to be diverse rather than
unitary,” and further positing that “‘national culture’ is necessarily a ‘selective tradition’
55
imaginative construct, and thus acknowledgement of how national narratives are built
around certain qualities and characteristics but not others, has been impeded by the
‘immemorial past’ where it’s [sic] arbitrariness cannot be questioned” (Brennan 45), and
narratives to perpetuate a nation’s sense of itself, given that myths, according to Roland
Barthes, “ha[ve] the task of giving an historical intention a natural justification, and
making contingency appear external” (142), and by national emblems, such as flags,
maps, uniforms, and national buildings, which work to suggest the fixity and
of Canada as “The true north strong and free” (13) inadvertently reveals how many
Canadians have similarly attempted to secure their nation’s legitimacy through discourses
In moving beyond such myths of genuineness, one can begin to see the nation as
influence for its continual reinvention. While national myths certainly possess an
enduring quality that offers the illusion of permanence and stability, they are more
broadly subject to gradual shifts and reconstructions that destabilize efforts to link a
recognizing the fluidity and narrativity of national identities exposes how the nation-
space is “in the process of the articulation of elements: where meanings may be partial
56
because they are in medias res; and history may be half-made because it is in the process
of being made; and the image of cultural authority may be ambivalent because it is
caught, uncertainly, in the act of ‘composing’ its powerful image” (3). Bhabha’s
the contingency of established national meanings leave open to doubt those qualities
upon which communities imagine their borders and belonging, and suggest the constant
and a unified national culture disallow us to see how the “‘other’ is never outside or
beyond us” (Bhabha 4), and it is this collective blindness that is integral to nation-
building. As both a means and a sign of shifts in national identification, literature and
other cultural institutions often demonstrate the volatility of semiotic systems and insist
on the need for individuals to look both inter-nationally and intra-nationally in order to
may suggest the need to discard static and clichéd representations of national identity,
Atwood contends that such constructions are not wholly dispensable. Discussing her own
such anachronistic national visions “before art or literature can play with them, that is,
make variations on them, explore them more deeply, utilize their imaginative power … or
turn them inside out. What art can’t do is ignore them altogether” (Strange Things 10).
central to the Canadian imaginary. As both an ex-centric and centric Canadian figure, the
violent woman engages in acts of brutality that often render her a social pariah, yet such
57
acts simultaneously gesture towards the broader trends of violence central to Canadian
society that are frequently masked by Canada’s national metanarratives. While Atwood’s
use of the brutalizing woman as a vehicle for social critique and re-evaluation may appear
and the connections already established between the nation and violence, and between the
nation and gender constructs. Emergent from this use of the brutalizing woman is not
only the recognition of how tradition and cultural change are potentially connected, but
variously denied and disclaimed by her society, the violent woman stands as the ideal
eschewing violent conflict in favour of a more passive, or moderate approach, there exist
Ness’s reference to “the bloody task of nation building” (89), and Spencer and
Wollman’s assertion that “competition, conflict and violence have been central to the
emergence of nation-states from the outset” (45), testify to the advent of the nation-state
in war, civil struggle, inter-denominational violence, and brutalities which often persist in
the maintenance and expansion of national boundaries. 52 The historical and conceptual
affiliation between citizenship and military service, where one’s ties to the nation and the
sacrifices and sufferings one makes in its name are mutually reinforcing, extends from
the logic that the willingness to risk one’s life for one’s homeland is required in exchange
for full membership within a polity and the promise of future protection and security. 53
While violence is typically imagined as divisive and destructive, this link between
58
nationhood and violence suggests how common sufferings, like common victories, can
incite a spirit of unity and solidarity, 54 and how political brutality, like that of the violent
woman, can perform as a sign that marks the extension and re-construction of national
boundaries.
cultural constructions connecting the nation to gender help readers to situate Atwood’s
use of the violent woman in re-evaluating national narratives. While the individual has
frequently been employed by Atwood and others to illuminate the nation and vice-versa,
where the individual concretizes the abstraction of nationhood and the nation illuminates
and projects subjective experience, 55 the consciousness of the nation has more
specifically been articulated through the female gender. 56 E.J. Pratt’s “Towards the Last
Spike” (1952), Leonard Cohen’s Beautiful Losers (1966) and Susan Swan’s The Biggest
Modern Woman of the World (1983) exemplify the continued use of the female figure to
examine Canada and its geography in Canadian literature. Yet it is the numerous
boys’ [game]” (“Evading” 139) that have particularly piqued Atwood’s attention, as well
conscription for the reproduction of the nation and its borders, 57 rather than the powerful
potential for subversion this implies. 58 While Cusack argues that women are relegated “to
symbolic rather than active roles in the polity” (2), where women’s designation as
national emblems allows them to perform in the mythology of nationhood, but not in its
everyday lived experience, others, including Nira Yuval-Davis, insist on the agency of
women within the nation-state. In her influential and insightful writings on the gendering
59
of the nation, Yuval-Davis outlines the primary ways in which women actively
participate in the development and maintenance of the nation through their roles in the
performing as “symbols of national ‘essence’” (116). 59 Yet even for Yuval-Davis, larger
patriarchal forces govern such reproductive roles for women, and power is only granted
to women as “social power” to “exert control over other women who might be
constructed as ‘deviants’” (37). In other words, while Yuval-Davis draws upon this latter
point to suggest how “women are not just passive victims” (37) within national frames,
her observation of women’s policing for the inappropriate behaviours of other women
indicates how, for some, women’s subversion is always already contained within the
circumscribed roles within the nation, Atwood’s fictional rendering of the violent woman
maintains the concept of women as variable reproducers of the nation, but further
recognizes the violent woman’s capacity for insubordination within this role. Contrasting
with Walter Seymour Allward’s statue of Mother Canada in the Canadian National Vimy
Memorial in France, which personifies Canada as a young mother mourning the loss of
her fallen sons and thus reiterates myths of Canada’s vulnerability and victimhood, are
the numerous cultural artifacts of the violent woman that have been produced in various
countries over the past two centuries in an effort to articulate national identity. 60 Such
wielding figure who perpetuates traditional national themes, such as liberty, justice and
the victorious spirit of the nation, rather than one who exposes the less exalted realities
60
that such themes belie. Diverging from this convention of aligning the bellicose woman
with popular national narratives, Atwood’s violent women are agents of both the
female deviancy to the margins of literary narratives, Atwood’s violent women frequently
manipulate the role of woman as stalwart gate-keeper of the nation’s ethos by admitting
unsettling images into the national consciousness, thus enabling a recognition of the less
As one of Atwood’s earliest and most widely read works of fiction, Surfacing has
publication of the novel in the early seventies during an era of centennial fervour and in
the same year as Survival has prompted many critics to read Surfacing as a treatise that
reflects Atwood’s early critical work in urging the self-consciousness of Canadians, and
inciting them to acknowledge the heritage of victimhood that is distinctly their own.
Coral Ann Howells posits this connection between the two texts in suggesting how they
“exist in a symbiotic relationship for although the novel was written first, it was through
writing it that Atwood realised certain common themes that her fiction shared with other
Canadian writing, and Survival in turn shows Atwood creating the critical context in
which to read her own fiction” (Margaret Atwood 39). 62 Yet such endeavors to see the
two works as congruous narratives overlook the manner in which the novel tentatively
61
aligns with, but more broadly undermines, the critical position Atwood develops in
victims” (39), thereby contributing to, rather than solving, the cultural unrest of the
period, constructing and destabilizing the Canadian signature in the same narrative
gesture. While many critics have endeavoured to question the validity, accuracy and
scope of Survival, 63 little has been said of this disjunctive and uneasy relationship
between the “victim theme” (111) of Survival, which includes Atwood’s model of the
four “Basic Victim Positions,” 64 and the construction of Canadian female violence in
squeezed from [her] lecture notes” (“After Survival” 133)—is reductive in its discussion
of issues that are more adequately and thoughtfully explored in her novel. 65 By allowing
Canadian vulnerability and Canadian violence to share centre stage, this discussion
makes apparent that what “surfaces” in the novel is the ambivalent nature of the Canadian
genius, 66 and the need to seek an alternative third position that moves beyond
frameworks of violence.
shifts between the present experiences and indeterminate memories of a young and
unnamed first-person narrator who is returning to the Quebec wilderness of her youth in
order to uncover the reason for her father’s recent disappearance, which we later learn is
due to his drowning in the lake while searching for Native rock paintings. The narrator,
accompanied by her lover Joe, and her friends Anna and David, settles into her father’s
recently abandoned cabin before beginning her search, only to discover that what she is
62
really seeking is an understanding of her own elusive and tenuously held past. However,
the narrator’s search for identity is never exclusively a pursuit of self-knowledge, but
rather, appears at times as her search for a definitive Canadian identity. 67 Numerous
critics, such as June Schlueter, have noted the ways in which the narrator remains in
dialogue with the nation, imagining her as a revealing figure who makes evident the ways
in which Canadians are rendered “vulnerable, consumable, and oppressed” (2). Yet it is
only in looking beyond this framework of victimhood that one is enabled to see how the
narrator’s recognition of her violent tendencies prompts her awareness of the violence
that similarly mars Canada and its historic past. As a harbinger offering a new
understanding of Canada and the ghosts it conceals, the narrator catalyzes a re-thinking of
the Canadian imaginary, and illuminates how the (re-)emergence of national identity
Canadian mythos are the feelings of “hanging on, staying alive,” and of an “intolerable
anxiety” (33) resultant from the perception of ubiquitous threat, the narrator of Surfacing
woman. In the opening paragraphs, the narrator’s notice of the burned out “R” in a sign
that resultantly reads “the oyal” (7) on the main street of a small Quebec town gestures
towards the rapidly fading imperial presence in Canada, and the simultaneous
body. Shortly after viewing this symbolic reminder of Canada’s susceptibility, the
narrator registers her general feeling of anxiety and her compulsion to “keep [her] outside
hand on the door” (8). In this instance, the narrator’s feelings of vulnerability while
63
traveling on an uncertain road in an unreliable vehicle with untrustworthy fellow
passengers are conflated with, yet paradoxically help to illuminate, her skepticism and
narrator recognizes that a nation’s independence from one imperial power can be a
prelude to the attacks of others. Yet such fears of national vulnerability are nothing new
to the narrator. As a child during World War II, the narrator anticipates her later fears of
ancient and indestructible as the Devil” (139), further imagining his influence to reach
her through her brother’s comic books and the swastikas in his scrapbook. The
reflected in her imaginative play with her brother, in which they would wrap their feet in
Years later, the narrator recalibrates the source of national threat in sensing
“disease… spreading up from the south” (7) and later synecdochically imagines through
Bill Malmstrom, who admits to having his eye on her father’s land “for quite some time”
power and Canadians being devoid of it. The vulnerability that the narrator repeatedly
“Canada as a whole is a victim” (35). Yet the narrator proceeds to complicate this claim
64
in her early, albeit unsustainable, conception of violence as that which firmly establishes
Canadian identity through its absence. Similar to Atwood’s observation that “in none of
our acts… are we passive” (Survival 246), the narrator early on suggests that victimhood
is not a form of passivity, but a gesture of national identification that distinguishes her
from others and that remains untainted with the brutality of the Other.
Extending her victim status to her identity as a woman, the narrator further
suggests that Canadian women face an increased risk of becoming victims, given the
previous role as a vessel for her former lover’s child, the narrator regards her possession
of a womb as a weakness that permitted her ex-lover to impose upon her an unwanted
pregnancy: “all the time it was growing in me I felt like an incubator. He measured
everything he would let me eat, he was feeding it on me, he wanted a replica of himself”
(37). The narrator’s perception of her unwanted fetus as cannibalistically feeding “on
[her]” reveals how she had registered the betrayal not only of her body and her lover, but
also of her unborn child, indicating the similitude between the narrator, who feels preyed
upon from all directions and who suffers from what Alice Palumbo identifies as an
“unvoiced, but lurking, anxiety” (75), and Atwood’s Canadian subject in Survival, who is
faced with omnipresent perils. It is only in retrospect that the narrator recognizes the
irony of thinking that answering “‘A lady’ or ‘A mother’” (97) would be a “safe”
response to the question of what she wanted to be when she grew up. Yet the narrator’s
obstinate return to images of her female victimization and to the threats impressed upon
Canadians, and thus her repeated identification with the second victim position which
indicates her victimization by socio-political forces beyond her control, betrays her
65
attraction to vulnerability as a paradoxical position of ascendancy. Atwood’s insight that
“People can be morally superior when they are in a position of relative powerlessness”
(“Just Looking” 122) and the narrator’s belief that “failure … has a kind of purity” (62)
offer a rationale for the narrator’s attraction to feelings of impotence. The profound
reversals implied by this reasoning signal the multidimensionality of, and the advantages
and more broadly on the notion of Canada as a “goody-goody land of idealists” (“Just
Looking” 122), signals the complexity and culpability that lies beneath the surface of
Since her childhood, the narrator has imagined the violent Other as slowly
contemporary America. Yet her later recognition that violence is not approaching, but
already present in her, forces her to acknowledge that her vulnerability is co-existent with
her own violent potential and incites an important realization: that the dichotomies of
good and evil rarely exist in their unadulterated forms in individuals or in nations.
Further, the narrator’s growing awareness of her violent capacities marks the departure of
Surfacing from the theoretical premise of Survival, and signals how the novel renders
inadequate “the ever-present victim motif” (Survival 95) proposed by the criticism,
including the four victim positions that underestimate Canadians’ potential for violence. 70
The narrator’s initial distancing from, and hostility towards, brutalizing agents and
way of unloading [one’s] moral responsibilities” (Strange Things 47), where the
66
characteristics that the narrator most fears and abhors in others are uncannily reflective of
characteristics she sees in herself and in her fellow Canadians. This unsettling recognition
exposes the deep ambivalence of the Canadian signature. National differences imagined
to distinguish between political bodies are used in Survival to offer citizens a unified and
cogent national narrative, yet such differences are to a large extent revealed as
a distinctive polity. Moreover, the Canadian potential for brutality indicates the capacity
for violence to emerge from unexpected entities, and the similarities between individuals
and nations that are frequently masked by powerful narratives of gender and nationhood.
one human on the mentality or physicality of another, the narrator’s violence frequently
takes the form of an attack on nature. Primarily insisting on the value of the natural world
while it is possible to recognize animals on their own terms, an animal is rarely “liked or
disliked for itself alone; it is chosen for its symbolic anthropomorphic values” (79). The
novel’s insistence on the need to recognize animals outside of their human resemblances
and the frailty of non-human life reveals its layered stance towards victimhood, wherein
human and non-human life forms are portrayed as vulnerable, and violence is not
exclusively that which is enacted against sentient objects or materials. 72 In this light, the
narrator’s childhood decision to throw leeches into the campfire, from which they would
“writhe out and crawl painfully, coated with ashes and pine needles, back towards the
lake” (142), and her later uprooting of weeds that “resisted, holding on or taking clumps
67
of soil out with them or breaking their stems,” and that left “green … weed blood” (83)
on her hands, can be viewed as acts of violence against nature. Like the mutilated heron,
which stands most powerfully as a testament to the potential victimhood of nature, the
animals and vegetation that the narrator variously annihilates suggest how violence
manifestation of the human desire to inflict torture and suffering, and the willingness to
end life in order to satisfy one’s own appetite for destruction. With a few exceptions, 73
the general failure of Atwood scholars to locate the destruction of the natural world
prevented critical analyses from moving beyond the acts of violence themselves in order
Proclaiming the dangers inherent in “other people telling [her] what [she] felt”
those imposed through discourses of nationhood and gender, the narrator describes her
atrocities she had exclusively associated with others. While similar violations against
nature may have been previously committed by the narrator, it is her recognition of such
acts as violence that indicates her “opt[ing] for life and responsibility” (Hutcheon “From
Poetic” 29) for both the destruction of individual life forms and the endangerment of the
ecosystem as a whole. More broadly, the narrator’s descriptions of her violence against
nature draw attention to Canadians’ participation in the natural ruination that has widely
been attributed to Americans’ behaviors and lifestyles. While Canadian readers are led to
68
believe that stories of “Senseless killing” and of horrific loon chases in powerboats that
continue “until [the loon] drowned or got chopped up in the propeller blades” (131) are
distinctively American, the narrator’s admittedly more subtle, yet nonetheless similar,
acts of violence bring Canadians into chilling alignment with their southern neighbors.
Here, national differences are not of type, but of degree. The willed forgetfulness of
Canadians to what David identifies as the founding of Canada “on the bodies of dead
animals” (43), such as beaver, seals and fish, 74 and their oversight of how Canadian
development has left “rocks blasted, trees bulldozed over, roots in the air, needles
reddening” (15), has hitherto permitted Canadians to overlook how violence coincides
with the birth of their nation and is woven throughout Canada’s past and present. The
how incomplete narratives have shaped the national genius. Given that the female body
has traditionally been utilized as a signifier of nationhood, and the boundaries of this
body a variable marker of the safety and security of the nation, 75 the destabilization of the
narrator’s bodily margins on account of her emaciation following her rejection of food,
her shedding of her “false body” (191), and her consequent attempts to grow fur, function
as a portent of this shift in Canada’s mythos, registering on a symbolic level the challenge
While violations against the natural environment and its inhabitants stress the
culpability that lies beyond myths of the nation’s “collective victim[hood]” (Survival
devices that suggest the violence humans enact upon one another. Functioning as a
69
conceptual gateway that enables her to recognize her potential to enact violence against
human bodies, the narrator’s use of simile in describing her brutality against animal
bodies indicates her mindfulness of how, in certain capacities, “[animals] are substitute
people” (150). After impaling a frog onto David’s fishing lure and listening to its audible
protestations, the narrator watches as the lure sinks and the “frog goes down through the
water, kicking like a man” (68). While the simile drawn here may initially appear isolated
or inappreciable, the narrator’s later perception of the dead heron as “strung … up like a
lynch victim” (125) signals her growing awareness that “Anything we could do to the
Increasingly aware of her brutalizing capacities, the narrator can no longer assume
the alterity of violence, making the painful discovery of her capacity to inflict harm on
various non-sentient and sentient surfaces, including those of humans. Recollecting the
hard truth of her abortion that she had hitherto denied incites her to envision that this
termination paradoxically birthed in her the capacity to harm others. In this sense, the
narrator’s pregnancy performs dually as an event that in one instance reinforces the
movement beyond such codes of vulnerability: “it was hiding in me as if in a burrow and
instead of granting it sanctuary I let them catch it. I could have said no but I didn’t; that
made me one of them too, a killer” (155). Once again, the narrator’s tendency to imagine
violence against nature prior to acknowledging her potential for violence against humans
is made evident through her analogy of her fetus as a defenceless animal, yet her
admission of guilt is ultimately partial and in denial of her earlier enactments of violence
70
In imagining her abortion as the origin of her brutality, the narrator overlooks her
childhood play with her brother in which they “killed other people besides Hitler” and
“gnawed the fingers, feet and nose off [their] least favorite doll, ripped her cloth body
open and pulled out the stuffing … [and] threw her into the lake” (140). 76 According to
Marie-Françoise Guédon, such acts indicate how “the [narrator’s] return to childhood is
not the way to redemption” (102). Given the narrator’s early exposure to violence against
the human form, later indications of her capacity for brutality present themselves without
surprise. While seeking the source of her father’s drawings, the narrator wishes “evil” on
her fellow campers who she presumes are American by praying for events which will
leave them stranded in the lake and that will “Let them suffer … burn them, rip them
open” (133), revealing how the narrator’s adult impulses towards violence are influenced
by her early practices. Before learning that the “American” campers are in fact
involvement in the death of the heron, and avows her compulsion to “swing the paddle
sideways, blade into his head: his eyes would blossom outwards, his skull shatter like an
egg” (138).
That the narrator repeatedly recollects her father’s teachings concerning the
legitimacy and even rationality of “killing” certain things, such as “enemies and food”
(140), further indicates her later adherence to her childhood lessons and suggests that she
defence. Yet her perceived need to safeguard her country fails to remain constant, and is
narrator’s destruction of nature, her admission of her proclivity for enacting harm against
71
humans incites her to look more broadly to recognize Canada’s similar potentiality. In
these moments of concession, the horrific brutalities enacted on Canadian soil are
recalled, 77 alongside the various ways in which these acts of violence have been effaced
by both conceptions of national vulnerability that Atwood fosters through her criticism,
violence by revealing traces of English Canada’s historic brutalities against the French, 79
and of the hostility that continues between them. The vandalized border sign that the
group passes in entering Quebec, which reads “BEINVENUE on one side and
WELCOME on the other” and “has bullet holes in it” (11), can be read as a palimpsestic
cultural marker that carries conflicting official and unofficial messages, 80 and that
later confessing that she was raised knowing very little about “what the villagers thought
or talked about, [she] was so shut off from them” (58), 82 the narrator highlights English
Canada’s disavowal of responsibility for its oppressions of the Québécois, 83 and what
Carole Gerson argues is the English-Canadian perception of Quebec as “both ‘us’ and
‘not us’.” Gerson’s further characterization of Quebec as a “place where the narrator
strips away … false surfaces” helps to illuminates how Atwood’s use of the Quebec
setting extends from a logic similar to that which informs her use of the violent woman.
72
facets of Canadian identity, such as its marred and bloody past, that have been similarly
There are, of course, others beyond the Québécois whose suffering has been
emphasizes nonviolence even at the expense of historical truth” (Djwa “Deep Caves”
178). While seeking the Native rock paintings that had captivated her father, the narrator
envisages her father’s lineage extending from the “original ones, the first explorers,
leaving behind them their sign, word” (136). Yet this reference to Natives as the “original
ones” establishes their opposition to later intruders, 84 disrupting what appears a fluid
historical connection between the narrator’s father and the land’s earlier inhabitants by
calling to mind what Himani Bannerji terms Canada’s “colonial and imperialist nature
and aspirations” (80). Bannerji has further said of Surfacing that it “follows a literary and
artistic tradition already in place” in which “indigenous peoples are either not there or are
one with the primal, non-human forces of nature” (80). However, given the narrator’s
recollection of how, as a child, there were very few Natives “on the lake even then, the
government had put them somewhere else, corralled them” (92), 85 and her interpretations
of the Canadian penny as displaying “leaves on one side and a [red] man’s head chopped
off at the neck on the reverse” (91), 86 it is perhaps more accurate to read the general
absence of living Native characters as a critique of Canada’s oppositional politics and its
brutal history of colonialism and erasure. In other words, what Bannerji in her critique
fails to address is the potential for textual absence to argue on the behalf of the absent,
and the possibility that the poignant omission of living Natives in Surfacing is an attempt
73
to draw attention to, rather than overlook, the atrocities endured by indigenous
populations.
traditions of violence and vulnerability, the narrator attempts to discover a way to live in
harmony with her human and non-human surroundings and to see beyond the binary
options she had previously imagined: “To immerse oneself, join in the war, or to be
destroyed. Though there ought to be other choices” (203). 87 Given Atwood’s sense that
the Canadian “genius is for compromise” (“Using Other People’s” 223), this pursuit of
identification persists despite her unsettling of the Canadian mythos, and how she can be
loyal to the nation while fighting within it for rectification and transformation. The
narrator’s exclusive reliance towards the end on people and constructs evincing the
qualities of process and dynamism suggests that her conception of balance is not defined
as a place one achieves, but a strategy of living perhaps best exemplified by Paul and
Madame, whose Québecois identity has forced them to practice cultural negotiations as a
survival strategy. Yet there has been little critical evaluation of the untenability of this
third option as a viable solution. Elsewhere, Atwood explains the impossibility of having
a “character who is fully liberated … in a society which is not. Unless we make that
person a mystic and withdraw them from the society” (“The Empress” 189). But for the
accompanying the achievement of a harmonious life, and her notice that there is “No total
74
salvation, resurrection” (204) suggests that she has not merely pursued the wrong
individual wrongdoings and violence as behaviours which are natural, essentially human,
and which “[are] in us too” (Surfacing 142). Observing how “the average” human life is
mortal, and explaining that “The trouble some people have being German … I have being
human” (141). From this, it becomes clear that position four of Atwood’s victim theory—
which proposes the “creative non-victim” (Survival 38) mentality as the most ethical and
potential for violence, and, ipso facto, the susceptibility to harm, at the center of the
human condition. In her later critical writing, Atwood concedes that what renders us “all-
too-human” is our “potentially hard and icy and monstrous … hearts” (Strange Things
88). Framed by such admissions, the novel’s final vision becomes simultaneously
indelibly tied to the ways of human being. Moreover, while the narrator’s violence forces
a re-evaluation of the victimhood central to both the Canadian mythos and Survival by
exposing Canada’s participation in, and collaboration with, violence, this same
vulnerability remains ineffaceable by the end of the narrative, given what Catherine
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Rainwater identifies as humanity’s “universally murderous traits” (17). If the narrator’s
transcendent third option is, by the novel’s end, a qualified hope and more an idealistic
***
In her short story “The Man From Mars,” Atwood extends her earlier harnessing
towards violence as a means of re-evaluating not only Canada’s vulnerability, but also the
Dancing Girls (1977), which is broadly concerned with issues of alterity and alienation,
“The Man From Mars” marks a shift in national discourses that, according to Howells,
and a national culture” (Margaret Atwood 51) since the publication of Surfacing. Due to
how the behaviors of Canadians in the late 1970s lagged behind such diplomatic
advances, and illuminate Carl James’s observation that “the opportunities and tolerance
that the multicultural policy and legislation promise” have been slow to “take root in
many parts of the country” (18). 89 Gesturing towards broader Canadian trends of
intolerance and ignorance, Christine’s brutality suggests that many long-standing societal
practices and discriminations have not been reformed by political policy innovations and
76
further indicates how Canada’s national imaginary misaligns with the de facto treatment
master narratives through the disquieting figure of the violent woman suggests that, as
with her earlier renderings, what she has to communicate is a message that few will be
comforted to hear.
Linda Hutcheon has written of multiculturalism as a doctrine that “is written into
our consciousness of what it means to be Canadian,” recognizing that while Canada has
always in some capacity negotiated cultural tensions and benefited from cultural richness,
the multicultural elements of Canada are now “an undeniable reality” (“A Spell” 5, 2).
Following Canada’s Official Languages Act in 1969, which acknowledged both French
and English as Canada’s official languages, Pierre Elliott Trudeau on October 8th 1971
multiculturalism policy. This measure was later reinforced by Bill C-93, the Canadian
Multicultural Act, in July of 1988, which further politicized “tolerance” and confirmed
with such political reforms and indelibly linked to them were changes in Canada’s
Canadian immigrants, prior to 1970, were predominantly individuals from the many
minority populations in Canada over the next thirty years. 92 The publication of “The Man
From Mars” in 1977 amidst such political reform is reflected in its exploration of
77
society’s alignment with pluralist measures, and particularly in its questioning of whether
or not visible ethnic difference has really ceased to be a challenge to the Canadian
identity and become integral to it. While critics such as Karen Stein argue that Atwood
“avoids political solutions because she views them as part of the problem” and therefore
seeks resolutions that are “personal” (Margaret 6), 93 Atwood’s assessment of shifts in
interconnections between the personal and the political. Aligning with the Hobsbawmian
notion that societal change must be enacted from both above and below, 94 “The Man
From Mars” implies Atwood’s sense that legislative reform must coincide with changes
Extending political debate to the literary sphere, “The Man From Mars” gauges
the extent to which policies of multiculturalism and the liberalization of immigration laws
have altered English Canada’s acceptance of immigrants, and evaluates whether or not
responses to the recent appearance of a young Asian man of unspecified origins on her
university campus, the narrative raises questions of ethnic tolerance as the persistent
young man develops an unexplained attachment to Christine and begins to pursue her in
both private and public spaces. 95 Initially, Christine extends to him a superficial
benevolence through her efforts to do “her duty” (15) and accommodate his arrival to her
school. To the extent that Christine feels she has done “[her] bit for internationalism”
(26) by feigning kindness to the young man, she indicates her desire to welcome the
stranger and her intentions to avoid close relations with him. Yet Christine’s ideal of a
polite and perfunctory relationship with the young man is soon rendered impossible when
78
she perceives his continued efforts to befriend her as threatening. That she soon imagines
the need to physically defend herself around the young man, and feels “weaponless” (16)
without her tennis racquet, further identifies the ephemeral nature of her acceptance of
the ethnic Other. Despite her acknowledgement of her superior physical strength (17),
Christine repeatedly envisions the “razors, knives, guns” (30) the young man might
potentially use against her and superimposes a violent persona onto an ostensibly
harmless young man. 96 In envisioning herself as the victim of an ethnic Other, Christine
not only mistakes her admirer’s vulnerability for her own, but further reveals how self
versus Other distinctions can potentially lead to inter-ethnic conflict and act as
Tétreault 16).
visions of assault and murder” (Thompson 112), the unfolding of events instantiate a
similarly observes that “the victim is not female, but the immigrant as ‘other’” (89).
While Christine is right to observe that, in reality, “there was nothing [the young man]
could do to her” (16), her “vicious urge” (20) while conversing with him on the phone,
and her strong inclinations to shake and hit him while in his presence (28), suggest that
the inverse is not necessarily true. Offering a corrective to Greta’s assumption in “Rape
Fantasies” that Canada is a place of safety and asylum (Dancing 95) and to Trudeau’s
optimistic but ultimately misguided belief that Canadians are “the trustees of
reasonableness, not violence” (qtd. in Frank et al. 52), Christine’s violent impulses and
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her obsessive reading of the similar potential for brutality in her admirer attest to how
many Canadians are complicit in a culture of violence that runs just beneath the surface
brutality, signaled by her failure to act on her urges, does not imply her rejection of
violent tactics, but rather the intangibility of her principle target: the young man’s
ineffaceable alterity. Notwithstanding this impalpability, however, the threat of the man’s
otherness appears particularly acute to Christine because it presents itself within and
around the privileged spaces of her university and her stately family home, and coincides
with the young man’s lonely shadowing of Christine, where this behavior further links
him to images of deviancy and paradoxically “antisocial” gestures. To the extent that
Christine regards her admirer as a stock/stalker figure, she is enabled to distance herself
from him, given her increasing perception of herself as an embodiment of the pursued
woman, in multiple ways indicating how “the power of convention transforms the body”
her new acquaintance, it is also useful to draw on Atwood’s suggestion that “there’s no
way of accounting for the atrocities that people perform on other people except by the
“Martian” factor, the failure to see one’s victims as fully human” (“Dancing” 76). This
explanation of how viewing an individual as non-human can act as a motivation to, and
justification for, violence is made manifest when Christine not only refuses to
acknowledge her admirer’s name (15), but also imagines that he has the abilities to “walk
through walls” and to “be everywhere at once” (31). Similar to the narrator of Surfacing
in her perception of Americans as men with “Raygun fishing rods, faces impermeable as
80
space-suit helmets … guilt glittered on them like tinfoil” (130), Christine envisions her
acquaintance’s alien status when she imagines that his native country is as “remote from
her as another planet” (35), an observation reflected in the title of the narrative. 97
Instantiating Atwood’s observation that “we all have a way of dehumanizing anything
which is strange or exotic to us” (“Dancing” 76), such descriptions suggest that the ethnic
alterity Christine perceives in the young man connotes such a radical otherness that it
encourages her to abstract his human qualities and to perform violence on that which
remains. What Christine fails to notice, or admit, throughout this process is her likeness
to the young man, and the ways in which her heavy set frame, and her “Obsessively” (36)
seeking details of the young man’s whereabouts after his disappearance, similarly render
her a socially marginal figure. It is only in the closing lines that Christine glimpses this
resemblance in imagining that her admirer, upon returning to his home country, is likely
of meaning, the advent of the irrational” (Whitehead 40), Christine’s early inclinations
towards violence and the ethnic intolerance it conveys gesture towards broader patterns
of behavior in her society and point out the necessity of continually (re)constructing the
terms of Canadian identity. In this sense, the boundaries between disruption and
restoration are revealed as ambiguous, and the violence of destruction becomes enmeshed
with the violence of regeneration. Exemplifying this paradox, Christine’s violence does
not so much effect the disintegration or collapse of the national imaginary as signal the
need to re-evaluate the terms upon which it is premised, ultimately forcing a re-
81
English-Canadians in response to increasing ethnic diversity. While critics such as
Hutcheon have remarked Canada’s deep roots in pluralist ways of thinking, Christine’s
brutality intimates how Canadians face much difficulty, and are often at odds with
themselves, in attempting to actualize such ideologies. Perhaps above all else, Christine’s
initial response to the Asian man raises the question of whether a nation characterized by
Canadians on a personal level, 98 Christine registers the failure of this vision and the ways
in which Canada’s legislative reforms have not been met with similar changes in the
Mars” have tended to privilege Atwood’s “adroit, sly comic gift” (Tyler), 99 yet typically
showcasing the veiled intolerance of Canadians in their encounters with visible ethnic
difference. The hypocrisy behind what Ray Conlogue terms Canada’s “sad pantomime of
Christine’s United Nations Club are reluctant to “represent the Egyptian delegation at the
Mock Assembly” since “nobody wanted to be the Arabs” (14). The desultory acceptance
of cultural diversity amongst Christine’s peers reveals that while Canadians distinguish
themselves through claims of offering a sovereign space for people of all origins, their
everyday behaviors frequently undermine such assertions, and that ostensibly “Canadian”
qualities can survive in the national imaginary irrespective of the de facto practices of
Canadians. Further exemplifying the disparity between Canada’s ideals and its flawed
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reality is Christine’s mother, who “pride[s] herself on her tolerance” (22), yet perpetuates
promiscuousness of her West Indies “girl,” Elvira (22). Refusing to see beyond the
consummate otherness and illegibility she identifies in her daughter’s new acquaintance,
Christine’s mother additionally insists that “you could never tell” whether foreigners are
“insane or not because their ways [are] so different” (32). 100 In moments such as these,
tolerance is exposed as a virtue that is frequently Janus-faced, 101 where patience and
of difference, and the refusal to judge other cultures is annexed with presumptions of
Atwood’s use of Christine to signal broader social trends is made further evident by the manner in
this sense, the real threat lies not in the presence of otherness, but in those who label and
react to visible minorities as “Others.” The racist assumptions underlying the policeman’s
message to Christine that the Asian man’s “kind don’t hurt you … They just kill you”
(32) indicates the institutionalized prejudice and the broader discriminatory surveillance
of visible minorities in Canada. When Christine finally leads the authorities to the capture
of her admirer, his familiarity with them is made evident by the fact that “He seemed to
know perfectly well who they were and what they wanted” (33). Here, the young man’s
response implies that we should be alarmed not by his behaviors, but by the ease with
which we accept Christine’s assessment of danger in her relations with him, and the lack
of hesitation demonstrated by the police in their reading of him as a homicidal threat. The
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narrative sustains this image of the Asian man as victim of broader cultural hostility by
further identifying the “intolerable strain” that he endures “just from being in this
country” (35) and that wracks his body, leaving him “deteriorated. He was, if possible,
thinner; his jacket sleeves had sprouted a lush new crop of threads, as though to conceal
hands now so badly bitten they appeared to have been gnawed by rodents … his eyes in
the hollowed face, a delicate triangle of skin stretched on bone, jumped behind his glasses
like hooked fish” (26). That the young man could only marginally sustain himself and
national vision, and indicates how Canada’s brutality towards immigrants can be enacted
in less visible ways through the accumulation of relatively minor discriminations and
in which a series of panels show Survival Woman’s sadly ineffectual attempts to bring an
emaciated-looking Chilean man through Canadian immigration, and her recognition that
“there’s more than one final solution” (55)—indicates Atwood’s recognition in the late
1970s of the multiple ways Canada enacts brutality upon ethnic minorities, and reiterates
her observations concerning Canada’s failure to act in agreement with its ideal of
multiculturalism.
***
the violent woman in the 1980s is evident in her representation of Becka in “Uglypuss.”
Conservative myths denoting Canada’s uniform wealth and Canadian poverty as a minor
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social problem. 103 Commencing with the focalizing of Becka’s ex-boyfriend, Joel,
“Uglypuss” details the residual antagonisms that persist between the couple following
their failed relationship, and their continued mutual involvement in Toronto street
theater, 104 a form of narrative on the “storyteller continuum” (156) that Karen Stein finds
links the individual narratives within Bluebeard’s Egg (1983). While the leftist
inclinations of both Joel and Becka are suggested by their participation in the troupe’s
immigrant strikers, it is Becka who identifies on a personal level with those struggling for
the “middle-class [radical]” (“There are no Texts” 131), or one whose right-wing
given his unspoken preference to avoid eateries that attract the “desperate” (76), the
facility with which he is able to replace the numerous furnishings Becka destroys after
space where “streets are so neat and clean and nobody lives on them, in shacks or storm
sewers or laid out on mats along the sidewalks” (78). Drawing attention to what Arthur
bodies, ideologies, social systems” (1), Becka destabilizes Tory mythologies of Canada’s
co-operative economy by gesturing towards the many pockets of poverty within the
nation and the brutal reality of how such impoverishment can provide an impetus to
violent action. That Atwood had just prior to the publication of “Uglypuss” been writing
“Kanadian Kutchur Komics” for the left-nationalist culture review This Magazine signals
her conjoining of nationalist thinking and class-conscious art during this period, 105 and
85
demonstrates her recognition of how an understanding of Canadian national identity can
While there is much variation and disparity within political conservatism, as with
any social institution, the constructions of national identity propagated through right-
wing ideology have typically underestimated the prevalence of, and minimized the
socialized welfare and the development of its politics of redistribution have contributed to
that has dramatically reduced the threat of poverty imagined to manifest itself elsewhere,
most particularly in the Third World or alongside vast wealth in American urban centers.
Aimed at providing a catch-net for the crises induced through capitalism, such as “high
wide recession” (Welch 272), Canada’s income security and social welfare provision are
orientations, 107 Atwood has at times appeared to support such mythologies of the nation’s
uniform wealth in asserting that the “Canadian way” has been to adopt “a more co-
operative view towards how the economy should be run” (“Where Were You” 90). Yet
economically” (“A Question” 56) in Canada in the late 1970s exemplifies her
understanding that Canada continues to suffer the societal problems generated and
perpetuated by class inequity. 108 The dramatic cutbacks in Canada’s social programs
during the 1970s, such as the decreases in Unemployment Insurance benefits (1975,
86
1977, 1978) and in Family Allowance benefits (1979), 109 situate Atwood’s narrative
within a period of economic vulnerability and indicate Atwood’s effort to bring to the
fore issues which conservative national narratives have repeatedly relegated to the
background.
through Joel indicates how Canadian poverty is frequently indiscernible, often remaining
secreted and unexposed; 110 like the anonymous “out-of-work m[e]n begging for handouts
on the street” (153) in “Spring Song of the Frogs,” the impoverished Canadians in
“Uglypuss” convey the sense of a poverty that is without a distinctive face and that
frequently evades notice. Davey has drawn attention to this imperceptibility of poverty in
leading him to conclude that “class in much of Atwood’s early fiction is a displaced sign”
(“Atwood and Class” 233) overwritten by various other social discourses. An immediate
effect of this “invisible” class structure is that it further allows the political Right to
overlook the pervasiveness of the nation’s poverty, and to mistake the inconspicuousness
of Canadian poverty for its absence. Yet despite the frequent imperceptibility of
Canadian class structures, which Atwood argues remain “so much more invisible”
(“There are No Texts” 130) than those of countries such as England, the dissolution of
Becka’s relationship and the shift to a focalization through her perspective exposes her
underprivileged status as well as the communities of need that surround her. 111 In this
sense, Becka’s privation paradoxically suggests both the invisibility of poverty, and its
pervasiveness. More precisely, Becka shares her experience of relative poverty with her
two female cohabitants, and with most of the residents in Cabbagetown: a neighborhood
87
Torontonians from the mid-nineteenth-century until the 1980s associated with
impoverishment and crime. Becka’s new lifestyle, which “reeks of impermanence” (91),
seasonal harvesters (79), and to the predominantly Portuguese workers whose labor is
Becka’s low-paying and hazardous job “mixing poster paints for the emotionally
disturbed” highlight the impermanence of her employment, given her notice that “these
days she’s lucky to have it” and her reflexive awareness that the label “emotionally
disturbed” is a title “that right now includes her” (92). Insisting on the reading of
Canadian figures as classed subjects, such representations outline the structure of poverty
in Canada that links impoverishment with unemployment rates and mental instability, and
give a distinctive face to Canadian poverty that disallows its further oversight.
In contrast to Joel, who views the personal as “trivial” (86), and Mort in
“Bluebeard’s Egg,” for whom protests are “social occasions” (Bluebeard’s 188), Becka
understands the inextricable connections between the personal and the political, and as
such, perceives the political utility of her relationships with others and the seriousness of
involvement with Joel and her later violent behaviors towards him to be read as
multivalent gestures that speak privately and politically, signaling not only the inequity
within their intimate relationship, but also the failure of society to support Becka beyond
the confines of this union. While Joel may be hyperbolical in describing Becka as
attempting to “encircle him, pin him down, force him into a corner” (78), his notice of
her desire for security and for “permanence, commitment, monogamy” (78-9) is an
88
accurate assessment of Becka’s reaching for financial stability through her relationship
with him and her search for what Davey describes as “something more than what the
inherited social patterns offer” (Atwood 149). 112 Yet her goals are achieved at the cost of
her autonomy and independence, and Joel is quick to recollect that Becka was the one to
move in with him (76), rather than the reverse, signaling his awareness of the dynamics
of dependency between them. Even Becka recognizes the falsity behind her pseudo-
epiphany that what she wants most in a partner is “gratitude equal to her own” when she
immediately afterwards states that “even in this she’s deluding herself” (90). Framing the
memories of her relationship with Joel through economic rhetoric, Becka stumbles over
the fact that “she’s invested so much suffering in him, and she can’t shake the notion that
so much suffering has to be worth something” (emphasis added 90-1), reflecting her
earlier protests to Joel in which she declares, “‘I’m worth nothing to you. I’m not even
acknowledges the need to secure her place in the society they create, her enactments of
violence protest Joel’s failure, or refusal, to provide her with socio-economic security,
thereby signaling not only the existence of Canadian poverty, but also the ways in which
such impoverishment can lead to atrocious acts, the latter of which reflects Atwood’s
assertion elsewhere that “Hunger corrupts” (“Red Fox” 17). Similar to her intersection of
female brutality and the working class in Alias Grace through the impenetrable figure of
Grace Marks, and in The Penelopiad through the twelve maids (68-9), Atwood’s
construction of Becka highlights the interconnections between disparate social issues, and
the recurrent theme of the violent woman’s failure to communicate the motivations
89
spurring her acts, given that Joel can only interpret Becka’s behaviors as those of a
“Histrionic bitch” (85). Becka’s destruction of Joel’s Lay-Zee Boy recliner that for her
(70) 113 —reveals what Joel cannot perceive: her desire to desecrate, profane, and perform
violence upon the symbols of the capitalist class. Yet the deeply nuanced description of
Joel’s vandalized chair additionally suggests Becka’s potential to enact similar violence
on the members of his social class. When Joel returns to his apartment after failing to
uphold his promise to meet Becka, he finds “the innards of his Lay-Zee-Boy, strewn
across the floor, its wiry guts protruding from what’s left of the frame” (emphasis added
85), and Becka later reflects that the black naugahyde chair “might as well have been
Joel” (88).
The semantic slippage that permits Becka’s target victim to be seen as both
inanimate and animate, conceptual and corporeal, is rendered less ambiguous in her
disturbing seizure of Joel’s cat Uglypuss. During this abduction, Becka is faced with the
sentience of her feline victim as it “clawed its way through the first two garbage bags”
and later lay motionlessness after she had tied it up “in one of Joel’s shirts and spray[ed]
it with boot water-proofer to quiet it down” (89). While Becka’s brutal seizure of Joel’s
cat is certainly intended to express her resentment over Joel’s failure to ensure her
security, her gesture in other ways connotes her recognition of her own failures within the
relationship and her manifold dependencies on Joel, leading her to regard Uglypuss as “a
grotesque and stunted furry little parody of herself” (89). The final image of Becka,
which depicts her “leaning her forehead against the cold shop window, staring through
the dark glass … at the fur-coated woman inside, tears oozing down her cheeks” (93),
90
uses the image of a fur-clad woman to reiterate Becka’s regret over allowing herself to
forego her autonomy and become reliant on Joel as her economic ægis. Yet in another
reading of this indeterminate scene, the dominant sentiment is not one of repulsion, but of
of the roguish female street urchin suggests that while class codes within Canada may be
unique to the extent that they are relatively imperceptible, Canada’s poor are
unexceptional to the extent that they connect with a long history of societal poverty
***
extends Atwood’s early and continued focus on female violence by embedding what
Carol Beran identifies as “the unknown, the foreign, the bizarre into everyday life in flat,
dull Canada” (“Stranger” 74). In particular, “Hairball” extends images of female brutality
through the urbanite Kat, who undermines Canadian codes of decorum and passivity by
making violence manifest in both language and fashion aesthetics. In forcing such codes
to sit uneasily and by drawing attention to the reality of Canadian violence, Kat
highlights the expository tendencies of brutality and what Redding, drawing on the work
of Hannah Arendt, terms the “revelatory nature of violence” (43). Generating a narrative
space within which national mythologies become undone, “Hairball” tracks Kat’s
aggressive careerism in London’s fashion magazine industry until she is scouted by her
married lover Gerald, or “Ger,” and persuaded to return to her home territory and to
continue her work with a Toronto magazine. However, the discovery of her ovarian
cyst—which Kat affectionately names “Hairball” on account of the hair and other human
91
features found within the benign growth 116 —and Ger’s usurpation of her Toronto
position following her post-operation leave of absence force the derailment of Kat’s
career, which was in many ways already jeopardized by the climate of conservatism in
Canada. More precisely, the insistence of her Canadian employers on portraying decency
and “good taste” through their fashion magazine reveals how Kat’s preference for the
aesthetics of brutality threatened her job security in Canada long before her infirmity. Yet
Kat’s ineffaceable Canadian identity throughout these experiences further indicates how
myths of Canadian propriety and innocence have become similarly imperiled, and
recognized by the end as convincing narratives that obscure the darker, yet irrefragable,
the collection. Yet Atwood’s nationalist alignments are nonetheless discernible through
her allusions to the Group of Seven in “Death by Landscape,” the Franklin Expedition in
“The Age of Lead,” John Richardson’s Wacousta in “Wilderness Tips,” and through her
construction of Kat in “Hairball” as a figure who, like her antecedents, 117 illuminates
troubling tendencies in her fellow citizens. 118 Moreover, despite the unobtrusive nature of
them to adopt the double vision of examining individual acts of violence in order to
recognize the humanity underlying them while simultaneously looking beyond the
many ways, the latter paradoxically ensures the survival of the national imaginary
92
through its continual renegotiation, a dynamic that is perhaps not surprising, given
Good 126) and the demonstrated tendency of violence to be both destructive and
violation, or “the breaking of some custom” (Keywords 279), suggests how violence can
ideological structures. However, his further suggestion that “order is recreated” through
“the whole experience of … disorder” (Modern 66) aligns Williams with Atwoodian
depictions of violence, and with later critics such Ness, Spencer, and Wollman who have
identified how violence within the nation is a disruptive means that typically results in
(re)constructive ends.
Embodying one of the few female characters that Hengen finds to be “effectively
politicized” (Atwood’s Power 110) in the collection, Kat enacts gestures of brutality
through language that not only reflect the generally violent disposition that has impelled
her to “[Rambo] through the eighties” (36) and helped create her public reputation for the
psychological and indirect violence of back-stabbing (46), but that additionally connote
the often veiled dangers inherent in Canadian life. As Atwood intimates through her
depictions of Kat’s doctor as one who regards ovarian surgery as an “[assault] on enemy
territory” (33) and Brian Fawcett explains, the reality is that “Canadians—or most of
us—live in an armed and subtly violent world” (32). Crafting her language to convey the
synæsthetic sounds of weaponry, Kat alters Gerald’s name to “Ger” in order to emphasize
the “hard” and “sharpened note of r,” and shortens her own name from Katherine to
“Kat” because the latter sounds “pointed as a nail” (36), abbreviating gestures that call to
93
mind the abrupt, punchy statements that more broadly characterize Kat’s speech patterns.
While evidence of Kat’s violence-inflected language may at first appear a matter of little
import due to its association with shifting epithets and hypocoristic naming, the indelible
significance of such linguistic gestures is not be underestimated, given that language was
“among the earliest matters to be ‘nationalized’” (Corse 45) in Canada, 119 and similarly
“laid the bases for national consciousness” (Anderson 47) abroad. 120 In short, Atwood
recognizes that language is encoded with, and aids in propagating, national values and
beliefs. While an analysis of the complex relationship between language and nation-
building is beyond the scope of this discussion, it is useful to highlight this connection in
order to illuminate how Kat’s conveyance of violence through language challenges the
mythos of Canada and the Canadian idiom, the latter of which appears “Dull normal”
Canadian politeness. Recognizing how linguistic gestures further stand as a mode of self-
fashioning and social positioning, where specialized registers and ritualized verbal
interactions are a principle means of conveying the appearance of external decency and
propriety, Kat aims to interrupt and break in on cultural conversations of Canadian good
manners. More precisely, Kat’s mocking pronunciation of her lover’s name while bidding
him farewell (36) subverts conventions of etiquette by using them to express a “warning,”
rather than well-wishes, and to convey to Gerald the sense that she is “ripping a medal off
his chest” (36), thereby leaving uncertain the practices of politeness and norms of civility
that Canadians have relied upon to define themselves. Given the deep nationalist
94
resonances of the collection and Atwood’s characterization of Wilderness Tips as “a very
Canadian sort of book” (“To Write” 194), it is perhaps fitting to extend this image of
stripped decoration to Canada, exposing how Canada can no longer claim the distinction
of the polite nation and highlighting the absurdity of differentiating a society through a
quality that invariably appears in every culture of the world. Moreover, by taking full
and decorum, Kat is enabled to challenge both associated discourses and their
intersections in a single expressive gesture, leading Beran to observe how Kat uses her
(78).
fashions into visual representations of brutality, building her career as a fashion prima
donna in London with the avant-garde magazine “the razor’s edge” on her ability to
“push things to extremes” and to create “grotesque and tortured-looking poses” which
even her London advertisers at times find to be “Too bizarre” (35). Claiming that she
“learned her trade well, hands-on” (37), Kat suggests that her aptitude for aestheticizing
violence is the result of her own rehearsal of bellicose behaviors, exemplified by her
practice of “the drop-dead stare” (37) and her preference for her “aggressive touch-me-if-
you-dare suede outfit in armour grey” (44). Yet as with Atwood’s earlier fiction,
“Hairball” highlights the essential illegibility of the intended message behind, and thus
cultural aesthetic, rendering her violent body a reified and branded consumer object, or
95
indicates her misguided outrage over the various men who have maltreated her, or
possibly signals aspects of both. What is clear, however, is that Kat’s journey back to her
home terrain and her transfer to the Toronto magazine Felice both exposes Canadians’
exemplifies what Atwood has long observed as Canada’s crippling effect on the artist and
her vision. 121 Like conventions of language, codes of fashion are recognized by Felice
decency and “good taste” (42). 122 In reflecting back to Canadians what they believe to be
true of themselves, the fashion aesthetics of Felice highlight Paula Hastings’s observation
that mass-circulated images have throughout Canada’s history been “instrumental in the
presented in order to ensure their alignment with the unspoken codes that govern
Canadian social life. Yet Kat’s knowledge of the distortion inherent in media
representation and its manipulation of “the gap between reality and perception” (42)
enables her to discern how the Toronto magazine, despite its attempts at portraying the
national ethos, offers contrived images that misrepresent the nation’s reality, and that
threaten to appear more real, given their glossy surfaces and their printing in vivid colors.
Seeing beyond the seductive image of Canada offered in Felice, Kat becomes
increasingly aware that the nation’s obligation to propriety is not uniformly innocuous or
entirely well-intended, frequently enacting its own form of brutality and compelling her
to feel “caged, in this country, in this city, in this room … It’s too stuffy in here” (43).
The increasing sense of defeat that Kat conveys through this reflection and its rhetorical
96
structure emphasizing a diminishing autonomy signals her loss over the “battle[s] …
fought and refought” (42) with her Canadian employers over her design innovations and
“conquer freedom.” While her professional superiors proclaim their desire to avoid
“tak[ing] risks” (42), thereby suggesting their preference for eschewing extremity in
unwavering defense of decorum standards, and thus their potential for both mannerly and
dissonant behavior, civility and aggression. Arnold Davidson’s observation that the
broader design of Wilderness Tips enables “the tales … [to] set forth countering versions
of the narratives they purport to relate” (“Negotiating” 185) indicates how the
identity. Yet the singular image that concludes “Hairball” works to the same effect. The
unsettling depiction of the abstracted cyst— that prophetically signifies “new knowledge,
dark and precious and necessary” and that “cuts” (47)—nestled within a box of chocolate
truffles and sent by Kat to Ger as a seemingly courteous apology for missing his cocktail
party, symbolizes how Canada hides its latent capacity for, even inclination towards,
hostility behind the façade of decency and gestures of etiquette. 123 Marlene Goldman, in
her similar reading of Kat as an “ex-centric Canadian” (Rewriting 91), argues that Kat’s
aggression paradoxically “epitomizes the sickness at the core of Western culture” (95). In
an alternate reading, however, Kat and all her bodily fragments can be understood outside
97
Yet the persistence of the violent woman in Atwood’s fiction and her illumination
of unsettling social trends suggests Atwood’s desire for Canadians to know themselves
for all their admirable and undesirable characteristics, and to recognize themselves within
a broader national community. If recent critical assessments are any indication, the
primary significance for both individual and group identifications despite the growing
cultures in time and place, and the ways in which identity depends on memory,” Anthony
Smith finds that “To date, we cannot discern a serious rival to the nation for the
affections and loyalties of most human beings” (195). While Grant in 1965 lamented
influential observation that has in some ways has come to pass given the growing
influence of American foreign policy, popular culture and economies on Canadian lives,
and the tendency of many Canadians to value personal profits over national affiliations—
many aspects of the Canadian identity today remain strong in large part due to the
nationalist efforts of writers such as Atwood. Through her fictional and critical works,
Atwood perennially returns to constructions of the national sign and to the ways in which
revisionism, and the need to regard national identity as an unsettled weltanschauung and
a narrative that approximates the nation’s reality only to the extent that it can be re-told
nationhood to violence and gender, Atwood offers the violent woman as a luminary
98
figure who exposes the partial truths informing the Canadian imaginary, and who
highlights the internal differentiation of the nation, reminding Canadians of how “There
isn’t just one story; there are lots of stories” (“The Empress” 184). Through her repeated
efforts to make Canadians visible to themselves in new ways, and to reveal the
Atwood identifies the various ways Canadians attack, and are attacked by, their fellow
citizens, victimize, and are made victims of, one another. Like the naïveté of Atwood’s
pioneer in “Progressive Insanities,” who imagines his “land is solid / and stamped”
character and their willed blindness to uncomfortable, yet necessary, national realities
Notes
39
Paul Goetsch has similarly observed Atwood’s concern for “questioning the concept of
a monolithic, stable [national] identity” (175).
40
More broadly, the national imaginary can be understood as a socially constructed
metanarrative that organizes and enables national identity through exclusive ideological,
political, and socio-historical frameworks, yet that also encourages Canadians to overlook
how “our national identity is neither unified nor natural but something we work at
reinventing and protecting everyday” (Brydon “Reading” 172). Also see Roxanne
Rimstead (7).
41
Sarah Corse, in her comparative analysis of Canadian and American national identities,
states that “the overriding focus of the national identity debate is “Does Canada have a
national identity?”, looking to English-French cultural tensions as the primary reason that
“a unitary identity [is] problematic” (111). Also see Charles Taylor’s Reconciling the
Solitudes (25).
42
Jonathan Kertzer similarly suggests that “the nation persists because it is protean,”
adding that “Nationalism is so deeply ingrained in modern thinking that it can hardly be
considered just one dispensable ideology among others” (174).
43
See John Hutchinson and Anthony Smith’s “Preface” to Nationalism and Ranchod-
Nilsson and Tétreault’s “Introduction” to Women, States, and Nationalism.
44
For example, see Atwood’s interview with Peter Gzowski “Closet Cartoonist.” Also
see Goetsch’s “Margaret Atwood: A Canadian Nationalist” and Sandra Djwa’s “The
Where of Here: Margaret Atwood and a Canadian Tradition.”
99
45
See Coral Ann Howells’s “It All Depends on Where You Stand in Relation to the
Forest” (48), and Frank Davey’s Reading Canadian Reading (63), respectively.
46
While Atwood concedes that “everything is ‘political’” and that “it would be
impossible to be a Canadian writer of [her] generation without developing a political
consciousness” (“Evading” 137), she further explains her reluctance to write from within
ideological frames, given that “Writing and isms are two different things … art is
uncontrollable and has a habit of exploring the shadow side, the unspoken, the
unthought” (“If You Can’t” 21).
47
Also see David Thomas’s (Ed.) Canada and the United States: Differences that Count.
48
For a further critique of Anderson’s theory, see Himani Bannerji’s “Geography
Lessons.”
49
See Paula Hasting’s “Branding Canada.”
50
While this construction of Canada as an authentic northern space is by no means
uniformly held by all Canadians, Sherrill Grace suggests the pervasiveness of this
representation in stating that “we have located North everywhere within our national
borders” (Canada xii). Also see (45-76).
51
Atwood appears to be drawing on such connections in “Variations on the Word Love,”
where soldiers sing of their love for their nation, while “raising / their glittering knives in
salute” (True 82).
52
Arthur Redding similarly argues that violence “forms an integral, vitiating ground of
any dynamic system whose purported equilibrium is merely a pretense” (5).
53
In acknowledgement of this simultaneously symbolic and bodily economy, women in
countries such as the US, Israel, Nicaragua, Lebanon, Sri Lanka, Turkey, Chechnya, and
Iraq have insisted upon their participation in violent political struggle, and various
insurgency groups, such as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia (FARC), the
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), the Shining Path, and the Liberation Tamil Tigers of
Ealaam (LTTE), have been significantly strengthened by the inclusion of women fighters.
See Nira Yuval Davis (89), Mia Bloom “Female Suicide Bombers” and Ness “The Rise
in Female Violence.”
54
Atwood accedes to this notion in Lady Oracle when Joan compares her mother to a
national crisis, and reflects on how her mother’s bringing the family closer together is
similar to the ways in which “a national emergency, like the Blitz” (181) keeps a nation
intact.
55
For example, Atwood insists on the necessity of “discovering your place” in order to
“discover yourself” (“Travels Back” 113), and employs individuals as national metaphors
in Power Politics when she states that her central poetic figures “are hostile nations”
(37). Also see Spencer and Wollman (6) and Kertzer (43).
56
For example, see Sunera Thobani’s Exalted Subjects, where she examines how
Canada’s social welfare system defines the nation through a female ethics of care and
“the feminized characteristics of compassion” (108).
57
Robin Morgan further elaborates on this feminist resistance to constructions of
nationalism in stating that “women seem, cross-culturally, to be deeply opposed to
nationalism—at least as practiced in patriarchal society” (23).
58
The subversive and satiric national commentary that Atwood offers through her
“Kanadian Kultchur Komics” (a comic series featuring Survival Woman that Atwood
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published between 1975 and 1980 under the pseudonym Bart Gerrard) in This Magazine,
a left-nationalist publication, signals her understanding of the subversive role that woman
can play in (re)producing the nation.
59
For further elaboration on the five roles of women in the nation, see Umut Özkirimli’s
Theories of Nationalism (205).
60
Such artifacts include Ludwig von Schwanthaler’s “Bavaria” (1837-48), Rolf
Adlersparre Zink’s depiction of Sweden in “Moder Svea” (1892-4), Yevgeny
Vuchetich’s rendering of Russia in his effigy “The Motherland” (1967), and the various
references to Britain through Pallas Athene. For examples of the last, see Anne
Helmreich’s “Domesticating Britannia: Representations of the Nation in Punch: 1870-
1880.”
61
Frank Davey confirms this observation in stating that Surfacing “was widely read as a
nationalist novel when published in Canada in 1973” (Post-National 9) and Coral Ann
Howells similarly finds the novel to be a “[product] of 1970s English-Canadian cultural
nationalism” (Margaret Atwood 37).
62
George Woodcock similarly finds that Atwood’s “criticism is not separate from her
fiction and her poetry; it is another facet of the same whole, and it constantly inter-
reflects with them” (“Bashful” 224). Also see Philip Marchand’s contribution to
“Surviving Survival” (21) and Nathalie Cooke’s Margaret Atwood: A Critical
Companion (68).
63
For an critical overview of such objections, see Walter Pache’s “‘A Certain Frivolity’:
Margaret Atwood’s Literary Criticism.”
64
Atwood characterizes her four victim positions as follows: “Position One: To deny the
fact that you are a victim,” “Position Two: To acknowledge the fact that you are a victim,
but to explain this as an act of Fate, the Will of God, the dictates of Biology … the
necessity decreed by History, or Economics, or the Unconscious, or any other large
general powerful idea,” “Position Three: To acknowledge the fact that you are a victim
but to refuse to accept the assumption that the role is inevitable,” “Position Four: To be a
creative non-victim” (Survival 36-8).
65
In Survival, Atwood’s admission that she makes a “sweeping generalization” in her
claim that each nation possesses a “single unifying and informing symbol” (31)
highlights her ability to see beyond her own frameworks at the time of their composition
and performs as an invitation for readers to engage with, and contest, her propositions.
Moreover, it is likely that such dissent is an intended rhetorical effect of Survival, given
that such opposition generates lively critical conversation and controversy around the
topic of Canadian literature that Atwood felt had hitherto been denied as an area of study.
66
The alternate titles for Surfacing, which include Camouflages and A Place Made of
Water (qtd. in Sullivan The Red Shoes 287) further suggest Atwood’s interest in
exploring the deceptiveness and malleability of individual and national identity.
67
Sharon R. Wilson insists that this duplicitous search for identity is a common motif in
Atwood’s writing, where “the narrators or personae of virtually all Atwood texts join
readers on quests for self and national identity, and for understanding of the past”
(“Mythological” 220).
68
Similarly, the narrator’s childhood drawings of “people-shaped rabbits” (97) living
inside of suspended eggs that they could exit through rope ladders hanging from the roof,
101
and sit upon in “safety” (98), suggest her early, albeit misconstrued, interpretation of air
raid shelters.
69
For example, see Atwood’s “The Curse of Eve,” and “Spotty-Handed Villainesses.”
While these critical essays appear several years after Surfacing (1978 and 1993,
respectively), they help to contextualize Atwood’s critique of constrictive gender
conventions and indicate her early fictional exploration of topics that appear in her later
criticism.
70
While Atwood’s theory of victim positions acknowledges the potential for individuals
associated with positions one, two and three to demonstrate “anger,” this distemper
remains indelibly connected to, and contingent upon, one’s experience of being
victimized.
71
An early epigram for Surfacing, which drew on John Holland’s 1651 text, Smoke of the
Bottomless Pit or A More True and Fuller Discovery of the Doctrine of Those Men Which
Call Themselves Ranters or the Mad Crew, offered a pantheistic vision in declaring that
“God is essentially in every creature, and that there is as much of God in one creature as
in another. …I saw this expression in the Book of Thieves, that the essence of God was
as much in the Ivie leaf as in the most glorious Angel” (qtd. in Sullivan The Red Shoes
288). Despite the editorial decision to delete this epigram from the published text,
evidence of Atwood’s pantheistic beliefs remain evident in her valuing non-human life.
72
Elaine Scarry similarly renders problematic the easy division between the constructs of
sentience and non-sentience in asserting that “Live vegetable tissue occupies a peculiar
category of sentience” (66), and in observing how objects that humans help shape are
regarded as “extensions of sentient human beings and as thus themselves protected by the
privileges accorded sentience” (174). Also see Ronald Hatch’s “Margaret Atwood, the
Land, and Ecology” (187).
73
Such as Janice Fiamengo in her essay “‘It looked at me with its mashed eye’: Animal
and Human Suffering in Surfacing.”
74
While David is generally associated with biased evaluations and misogynist
perceptions, he in this instance prompts a moment of national memory that is unnerving
on account of both its source and its veracity.
75
See Zillah Eisenstein’s “Writing Bodies on the Nation for the Globe” (43).
76
While the narrator, in describing this memory, offers the caveat that her doll was not a
sentient being, she further insists that “children think everything is alive” (140).
77
Such brutalities include, but are certainly not limited to, the Seven Years War and the
battle on the Plains of Abraham, the War of 1812, the elimination of Newfoundland’s
Beothuk people, the attacks against the civilian population of Beauharnois, the
persecution of Louis Riel, the institution of residential schooling, and the Japanese
internment. Also see Linda Hutcheon’s “‘A Spell of Language’” (11), J.A. Frank,
Michael Kelly, and Thomas Kelly’s “The Myth of the ‘Peaceable Kingdom’,” and Judy
Torrance’s Public Violence in Canada.
78
See Survival (92).
79
Atwood further examines this history of English-French conflict in her short story “The
Bombardment Continues.”
80
The narrator’s recollection of her brother, joined by his classmates, participating in
similar acts of hostility by throwing “snowballs at [the French Catholics] in winter and
102
rocks in spring and fall” (60) suggests how this inimical relationship between French and
English Canadians is learned through early behaviors.
81
See Atwood’s “Where Were You When I Really Needed You” (87).
82
The narrator’s father and Paul attempted to overcome this cultural divisiveness through
“ritual” (22) exchanges of vegetables, which enabled them to communicate in a deeply
meaningful manner that circumnavigated the language barrier.
83
In creating and marketing habitant carvings that “sell in tourist handicraft shops” (21)
and ornamental barometers with a “woman in her long skirt and apron … [a] man …
carrying an axe” (26), English-Canadians further deny the veritable experiences of
French-Canadians, imagining them as reified objects without a lived history.
84
Here, I diverge from the critical analysis of Cynthia Sugars, and her sense that “In
these moments the father’s ghost becomes explicitly fused with the Aboriginal ones,”
thereby creating the effect of “a single legitimating genealogical line” (150).
85
While the novel’s opening paragraphs suggest how the imperial presence is fading in
Canada, it is observations such as these that indicate how its legacy continues in the
present day.
86
This image anticipates Atwood’s later attempt to read violence in Canada’s emblems
and to view the Canadian flag as an ideograph of the violence enacted within the nation.
87
In an early interview, Atwood similarly notes that “you can define yourself as innocent
and get killed, or you can define yourself as a killer and kill others. The ideal would be
somebody who would neither be a killer or a victim, who could achieve some kind of
harmony with the world” (“Dissecting” 16).
88
Also see Atwood’s “A Question” (22).
51
This approach to discourses of multiculturalism in Canada diverges from the analyses
of critics such as Bannerji, Thobani, and Donna Bennett, who have engaged the topic of
pluralism not only to show the failure of society to live up to this ideal, but also to reveal
the problems inherent to multiculturalism itself. While such critics’ evaluation of ethnic
pluralism is valuable and necessary to ameliorate the shortcomings inherent to any
ideological system, such discourses did not emerge until significantly after the
publication of “The Man From Mars” and are somewhat peripheral to Atwood’s interests
in the narrative. See Bannerji (37), Thobani (143-175) and Bennett (193-4).
90
For a more detailed overview of the history of equity reform in Canada, see Walter
Johnson’s The Challenge of Diversity (1-17).
91
Thobani points out that “From Confederation until the 1960s and 1970s, immigration
and naturalization legislation distinguished first British and French, and later, other
Europeans as ‘preferred races’ for integration into the nation” (75).
92
See James (26-27) and Thobani (15).
93
Also see Diana Brydon (111).
94
See Hobsbawm (9-11).
95
The numerous similarities between Christine and Joan from Lady Oracle (1976),
including their mutual participation in the United Nations Club, and Joan’s similar
experience of being pursued by an unnamed and “sprightly, bright-eyed foreigner” (99)
of uncertain origins, suggests that Atwood, in “The Man From Mars,” is exploring in
greater depth themes she had cursorily examined in Lady Oracle.
103
96
A catalogue of the various taxonomies used by Christine’s male peers to classify
women, including “cock-teaser,” “cold fish,” “easy lay,” and “snarky bitch” (29), suggest
that it is the men of her own culture, rather than those of a foreign culture, that she has
reason to suspect and fear.
97
Christine’s aggression towards her admirer further resembles Rennie’s “angry”
reaction to an overly friendly yet “harmless” (75) Caribbean man in Bodily Harm.
Observing her response to the young man, Paul identifies Rennie’s behavior as “Alien
reaction paranoia” (76). Also see “A Travel Piece” (Dancing 153).
98
In his speech to the House of Commons on October 8, 1971, Trudeau aligns the
acceptance of ethnic pluralism with nationalism and maintains that, “a policy [of
multiculturalism] should help break down discriminatory attitudes and cultural jealousies.
National unity, if it is to mean anything in a deeply personal sense, must be founded on
confidence in one’s own individual identity; out of this can grow respect for that of
others.”
99
Also see Jerome Rosenberg’s Margaret Atwood (121).
100
While John Ibbitson argues for the “lack of a national mythic identity” in Canada, and
for the ways in which this absence “actually makes it easier for migrants from more
deeply rooted cultures to integrate into the national fabric,” Atwood conversely argues
that it is the durability of Canada’s national myths that make immigrants’ integration into
Canadian communities difficult and bewildering.
101
Also see Hans Oberdiek Tolerance: Between Forbearance and Acceptance (1-8).
102
See above note 20.
103
Rimstead offers a useful illustration of this myth in examining the advertisements and
articles in a March 1993 publication of Maclean’s, a mainstream Canadian weekly news
magazine. In her analysis, Rimstead argues that Maclean’s generates a Canadian national
identity that largely precludes the poor and “project[s] poverty onto the Third World
while simultaneously erasing or rationalizing poverty in Canada” (228). Also see
Rimstead (7, 14).
104
In suggesting that California street theater is the tradition from which his political
performances in Toronto emerge (67), Joel overlooks Canada’s historic participation in
this form through the “Workers’ Experimental Theater” and the agit-prop theater troupes
emerging from Toronto in the 1930s. See Toby Gordon Ryan’s Stage Left: Canadian
Theater in the Thirties and Scott Forsyth’s “Communists, Class, and Culture in Canada.”
105
In particular, see her October 1977 installment of “Kanadian Kultchur Komics.”
106
For a more detailed discussion of Conservative perspectives on poverty in Canada, see
Johnson (212-219).
107
For example, see Atwood’s interview with Beryl Langer “There Are No Texts without
Life” (131-2).
108
Atwood’s refusal to align herself indiscriminately with a single political party and her
ability to critique orthodox political allegiances is evident in her definition of politics:
“Politics, for me, is everything that involves who gets to do what to whom…It’s not just
elections and what people say they are—little labels they put on themselves. And it
certainly isn’t self-righteous puritanism of the left, which you get a lot of, or self-
righteous puritanism of the right” (“Using What” 149).
104
109
Shereen Ismael notes that such reductions were “not an exclusively Canadian
phenomenon. Throughout the Western world, the welfare state came under attack as high
unemployment, high inflation and high public sector deficits badgered the post-industrial
economies of Western nations” (32).
110
Rimstead argues that, beyond Conservative myths of the nation’s uniform wealth, the
reasons for the relative invisibility of Canadian poverty include: the propensity for
Canada’s poor to “pass in and out of poverty” (16), the tendency of impoverished
“women, children and families” to be “less visible on the street” (17), the relegation of
the poor to isolated and ghettoized areas (12), and our capacity for not seeing what we do
not want to see (5).
111
While suggestions of Becka’s underprivilege surface earlier through Joel’s suggestion
that he cannot be held personally responsible for all of “the things that he had and she
hadn’t” (70), it is not until the shift in narrative perspective that the reader is made fully
aware of Becka as the “have not” within her previous relationship.
112
Similarly in The Penelopiad, Penelope’s maids perform a tune in which the “Third
Maid” proclaims her longing for a “young hero [to] take [her] for his wife” (52), and
forecasts that without this, “Hard work is [her] destiny” (52).
113
In early versions of the narrative, Becka pronounces “bourgeoise” as “boor-jew-wize”
(“Uglypuss [Drafts]”), indicating how Atwood initially coupled Becka’s physical
violence with a verbal violence that takes aim at Joel’s Jewish heritage.
114
Atwood own academic focus on and teaching of Victorian literature denotes her
familiarity with such nineteenth-century conventions.
115
For example, see Brian Fawcett’s “Scouting the Future” (29), Howells’s Margaret
Atwood (50), and Isabel Carrera Suarez’s “‘Yet I Speak, Yet I Exist’” (240).
116
The ambiguous nature of Kat’s ovarian cyst anticipates both the confusion
surrounding Grace Mark’s pregnancy at the end of Alias Grace—where Grace
acknowledges that her pregnancy “might as easily be a tumour” (550)—as well as the
final use of the cyst in “Hairball” as an ambivalent signifier. Also see Atwood’s poem
“Cell” in Morning in the Burned House (47-8).
117
The increasingly apparent connections between Atwood’s violent women—linking
Kat, whose name connotes “street-feline” (36), to Becka, who repeatedly agonizes over
her cat-like dependencies on Joel, and further connecting Kat to the narrator of Surfacing,
given their mutual affairs with married men, their similar experiences with abortion, and
their shared description as twinned figures—suggest Atwood’s self-reflexive awareness
of the growing tradition within her fiction of the violent woman as a figure with
unsettling ties to the nation.
118
In her review of Wilderness Tips, Grace similarly points out how Atwood is re-visiting
previously explored characterizations in her constructions of female figures, contributing
to her assessment of the collection as “unmistakable, familiar Atwood” (“Surviving” 32).
119
Examining the history of nation-building in Canada, Corse argues for the centrality of
language and literature in developing English and French conceptions of communal
identity. For the French in particular, Corse posits that, “Quebec literature and the
Quebec literary tradition are generally understood … as originating within the French
tradition … [and] as deeply tied to issues of French-Canadian development and
nationalism” (45).
105
120
Also see John Hutchinson’s Nationalism (105) and Ray Conlogue’s Impossible Nation
(21, 133).
121
For example, see Survival (177-194) and “Canadian-American Relations.”
122
Cusack adds that visual aesthetics are a “powerful tools for national expression” and
are “crucially engaged in the representation of national identity” (1), given the tendency
of visual art to be mass disseminated, publicly visible, and transcendent of linguistic
barriers. As such, visual aesthetics, like language, are revealed to play an important role
in the building and (re)construction of national consciousness.
123
The image of Kat’s cyst set inside in a box of confectionary recalls the women-shaped
cake that concludes The Edible Woman and that is similarly used to prompt a re-thinking
of social conventions.
106
Chapter 3
In [the Victorian Period], a woman writer was a freak, an oddity, a suspicious character.
How much of that sentiment lingers on today, I will leave you to ask yourselves …
As a young child, Margaret Atwood, like many other women of her generation,
was taken to see Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s film The Red Shoes (1948),
which imparted to her the fatalistic message that “You could not have both your artistic
career and the love of a good man as well, and if you tried, you would end up committing
suicide” (“The Curse” 224). The enduring impact of this edict, which positions
womanhood and artistry as antithetical subject positions, can be seen not only in
Atwood’s donning of striking red footwear at the 2005 Calgary WordFest, 124 and her
remarking on her interviewer’s “little red shoes” (“Mallick” 37) in her 2007 conversation
with Chatelaine magazine, but also in her more extended gestures of fictional
women surfaces perennially in her artist fictions such as Lady Oracle (1976), Cat’s Eye
(1988) and The Blind Assassin (2000), which incite recognition of self-destruction as a
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form of violence and reflect her fascination with the female artist as a figure of existential
tension. 125 While the difficulties of women’s artistry have long been acknowledged by
Atwood and numerous others, notably Virginia Woolf, Elaine Showalter, Sandra Gilbert
and Susan Gubar, it is Atwood’s proposal of “the Red Shoes syndrome” (“The Curse”
226) and her female artists’ attempts to overcome their anticipated self-violence that
provides the focus of this chapter. Revising Victorian strategies for representing female
commenting on Atwood’s own struggles as a woman artist, the Red Shoes Syndrome
offers a broader conceptual framework to what Atwood terms “the perils of creativity”
(“The Curse” 226) that artists such as Woolf, Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, and perhaps
even Atwood’s friend Gwendolyn MacEwen, 126 suffered in the extreme. Yet as my
broader study has shown, Atwood’s violent female characters can be regarded as escape
artists and adroit revisionists who resist prescriptive cultural narratives, including those
that Atwood herself has labored to define and bring to light. More precisely, through
dissociative strategies and projection, Atwood’s female artists are able to evade the
deadly designs of the Red Shoes Syndrome and thus rely on their capacity for
become evident, the projective strategies female artists come to rely upon frequently
and creativity that can lead women to self-destruction, Atwood’s proposal of the Red
self-harm and the mis-perceptions they entail. Typically inscribing women as victims of
108
romantic love, madness, or their own passivity, 127 Victorian female suicides were
depicted with relative uniformity, leaving women victimized not only by their own
misfortune, but also by the social narratives delimiting how their infelicity should
female suicides in literature as resulting from medical illness and mal d’amour” (88) and
“feminized” the suicidal act, thus enabling men to distance themselves from, and
objectively examine, the experience of death. In Lady Oracle, Joan’s hasty composition
of the latter half of her gothic romance, Escape from Love, in which the Countess of
Piedmont “now quite demented, plunged to her death off a battlement during a
thunderstorm” (176) following the loss of her lover, Sir Edmund DeVere, clearly satirizes
such conventions and the simplistic female interiority they imply. Nineteenth-century
to romantic relationships, perhaps even coterminous with them, and when considered
alongside the Victorian tendency to regard suicide as a defeat, rather than release, of the
self (Gates 27), it is possible to see how female suicides comprised a distressing
statement of finality. It was not until the end of the Victorian era that suicide was more
widely imagined as a sign of social malaise, inculpating social institutions for their lack
the stresses and discriminations endured by women artists. Showalter explains that it was
during the “Feminist phase” (1880-1920) that female artist suicides “became conspicuous
for the first time” (A Literature 194), 128 and the “female aesthetic was to become another
Literature 240).
109
Atwood’s Red Shoes Syndrome extends from this early effort to expose and
interpret the potential lethality of the female artist role and reflects the formative
The Red Shoes stars Moira Shearer as Victoria Page, a young ballet protégé under the
direction of the doctrinaire but alluring impresario Boris Lermontov. Claiming early on
that she “dances to live,” Victoria is utterly devoted to her art and, under the guidance of
Lermontov, is enabled to foresee the full extent of her potential as a prima ballerina. Yet
she soon learns that the pursuit of her art comes at an insufferable price. Soon after
falling in love with the young composer Julian Craster, Victoria is forced to choose
between romantic love or her art. Stricken by the immense loss each decision entails,
Victoria decides to take her life by jumping in front of a train. Reflecting on this film
years later, Atwood finds that “there is some truth” (“The Curse” 226) behind the film’s
message as well as paradox: “Woman and [Artist] are separate categories; but in any
individual woman, they are inseparable” (“On Being” 195). 129 Staged by Gilbert as “The
Plath Myth” (“A Fine” 248), and elsewhere by Gilbert and Gubar as a struggle between a
woman’s angel and her monster, wherein a woman’s “aesthetic ideal” comes into conflict
female … becoming a monster or freak” (The Madwoman 17, 34), the Red Shoes
Syndrome gives a new name to the widely discussed conflict between women’s
restrictive socialization and their artistic impulses. At the heart of this struggle is the en-
gendering of artistry and the enduring belief that creativity is an exclusively male
preserve. Nicole Ward Jouve demonstrates that “within the classical Greek and the
Judeo-Christian civilizations and their European offspring” women have been instilled
110
with the idea that creative acts are “firmly aligned with the male of the species,” thus
rendering the “female creator … a deviant” (2). Atwood, recalling her early influence by
Robert Graves’s The White Goddess, similarly finds that women are early acquainted
with the understanding of “Man [a]s the poet, woman [a]s the Muse” (“The Curse”
224), 130 further suggesting how her conception of the Red Shoes Syndrome arises in
response to her encounters with the cultural belief that women’s artistic successes are an
The continuing influence of the Red Shoes symptomatology on the critical and
fictional writings of Atwood is perhaps best explained by the unsettling persistence of the
syndrome more broadly amongst Western women artists. Denise Levertov, in a deeply
personal essay written in the weeks following the death of Sexton, remarks the unsettling
manner in which women passively inherit this fatal narrative as an inescapable imperative
that ironically escapes being subjected to critical evaluation. Levertov observes that many
young female artists hold a blind faith in the idea that “in order to become poets
themselves, they [have] to act out in their own lives the events of [Plath’s],” to which she
adds her fear of seeing “a new epidemic of the same syndrome occurring as a response to
Anne Sexton’s death” (my emphasis 80). Yet Sexton, in her poem, “The Red Shoes,”
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Handed down like an heirloom
The inevitability of artistic influence, and women artists’ reliance on, and responsiveness
to, their precursors’ traditions and practices, has undoubtedly been a source of
empowerment and inspiration, allowing women to chart their own artistic course through
those of their progenitors. Yet the observations of Levertov and Sexton point to how the
Red Shoes Syndrome comprises a shadowy and often overlooked underside to this female
tradition. Moreover, the contagious nature of violence, explored by René Girard in his
observation that “the mimetic character of violence is so intense that once violence is
installed in a community, it cannot burn itself out” (81), seems to find a particularly
Walsh and Paul Rosen describe how the “contagion phenomenon” associated with self-
Yet the recurrent appearance of the Red Shoes Syndrome in Atwood can be
additionally linked to the manner in which it reflects and gives theoretical shape to her
Atwood’s determinative years, The Red Shoes, demonstrates how others have similarly
employed the rubric of the Red Shoes Syndrome as a roman à clef to explore her early
belief that “she couldn’t get married, have children, and be a writer too” (Sullivan 69).
While this discussion does not propose the reading of Atwood’s fiction as an analogue for
her life experiences, given that even biographer Nathalie Cooke characterizes Atwood’s
112
suggest that Atwood to an extent draws on her personal past in giving shape to her
imaginative work, and that she has made various attempts to evade the difficulties and
impasses faced by many female artists. Foremost among these is her repeated use of
assumed names to publish her creative work. Under the name Shakesbeat Latweed, an
amalgam combining her own name with that of Dennis Lee’s, and the androgynous M.E.
Victoria College’s literary journal. Similarly for her visual art, she used the pseudonyms
Bart Gerrard to publish her Kanadian Kultchur Komics in This Magazine, and Charlatan
Botchner for her illustrations in her children’s book Up in the Tree (1978). With the
exception of her work in children’s illustration, a field which likely favors, rather than
reflect her efforts to evade the discriminations she felt ineluctably faced the female
creative genius. 132 Yet as her continuing prolificity and half-humorous explanation that
being the “old crone of Can Lit” is “Better than being the dead 31-year-old” (“A
Practical”) attest, Atwood has become one of the greatest exceptions to the Red Shoes
Syndrome’s moribund conclusion. While she has been unmistakably affected by the
archetype of the fated female artist, the revisionist spirit that is characteristically seen
throughout her work is again made evident in her efforts to imagine for her fictional
women artists an alternate ending to the narrative of the Red Shoes Syndrome.
behavior both reflects her scientific background, 133 and initially suggests her sense of
individual action as scripted and foreordained. Conceiving of such afflictions as the Red
Shoes Syndrome, the “Rapunzel Syndrome” (Survival 209), the “Handsome Prince
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syndrome” (“Introduction … Robber”), the “Quiller-Couch Syndrome” (“On Being”
197), the “Arctic syndrome” (Animals 48-9), the process of Canadian expatriation that
13), and most recently the Moral Disorder, Atwood ventures to give shape to Canadians’,
animals’, men’s and women’s experiences. Yet her taxonomies do not aim to
frames, but to expose how individuals frequently defy the definitive limits placed upon
them, and how cultural constructs are often inadequate to the task of creating stable
meaning around individual and collective bodies. Working through the problematic
pathologizing of individuals that strips them of their ethical responsibility and free will,
Atwood explains that there is an excess that surrounds such labels and that “Naming your
own condition, your own disease, is not necessarily the same as acquiescing in it”
(Survival 42). More precisely, through various modes of projection, Atwood’s fictional
female artists are enabled to save themselves from the deadly trajectory of the Red Shoes
Syndrome that they initially seem fated to follow. Unlike the women of the “Feminist
annihilation, or Plath’s speaker in “Lady Lazarus,” who similarly imagines that “Dying /
Is an art” (17), Atwood’s female artists ultimately refuse to allow their creativity to
become the vehicle of their self-destruction, opting instead to use their capacity to
114
Numerous critics have noted Atwood’s use of dissociative strategies in her
fictional representations of violent women and others’ responses to them, 134 indicating
how the individual subject in Atwood’s fiction, despite her singular appearance, is
typically intertwined with the lives of those around her. Moreover, while both Atwood
and her female characters at times express their reluctance to place full faith in the
validity and accuracy of psychoanalytic paradigms, 135 Atwood’s use of such frameworks
in her critical (Survival 36-7, 91) and fictional writing suggests her understanding of
Freud returned to throughout his career, projective fantasies constituted for him a primary
means of ego defense, and a protective strategy used by individuals to contend with those
traits or characteristics that are detrimental to the self. Through this “psychical
mechanism,” attributes that are internally insupportable are “ejected from internal
perception into the external world, and thus detached from [the self] and pushed on to
someone else” (Freud 13:62-3). As an everyday “normal proceeding” that “has a regular
share assigned to it in our attitude towards the external world” (12:66), projective
fantasies stem from a basic logic that Freud makes clear: “the subject can protect himself
against an external danger by fleeing from it and avoiding the perception of it, whereas it
is useless to flee from dangers that arise from within” (20:126). 136 The ego’s transposing
outward that which causes pain within itself is in many regards a means of boundary
maintenance, where the projected image is a product of the subject’s internal world that is
forcibly relocated beyond the demarcation of the self, enabling the individual to dispel to
the outside that which she does not want to contain inside herself. Freud notes, however,
that while projection enables the subject to disassociate from her unendurable traits, it
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does not allow her to be free of them, since that which “was abolished internally returns
from without” (3:458). In this sense, the projected attribute is not entirely lost from
reality, but staged to return continually to haunt the individual, reminding her of that
which she has attempted to deny within herself. To the extent that Atwood’s female
their identity, they align themselves with Freudian accounts of the defense mechanism,
but not without qualification. In challenging the sweeping (and in many cases
insupportable) assumption underlying Freudian theory that all projective efforts and
“pathological phenomena [are] derived in a general way from repression” (12:66), 137
Atwood’s female artists demonstrate how defense processes are often more conscious
than Freud’s theory permits, and thus the intentionality of their self-preservation. More
aptly, the female artist’s dissociation, as a purposeful and creative solution to the problem
of identity conflict, highlights how their survival does not happen to them, but is
deliberately sought.
Lady Oracle highlights the maturation of, and challenges encountered by, the
female artist through the novel’s first-person narrator, Joan Delacourt, leading numerous
critics to observe the substantive influence of the Künstlerroman form, 138 as well as that
of The Red Shoes film and the related narratives of Lord Alfred Tennyson’s “The Lady of
Shallot,” and Hans Christian Andersen’s The Little Mermaid and The Red Shoes. 139 As a
young girl who, at an impressionable age, discovers her artistic inclinations alongside the
obstacles inhibiting it, Joan inherits from her mother, Frances, and other women in her
early life the notion that abiding social scripts of femininity means not pursuing one’s
own imaginative expression. The self-destructive eating habits that Joan turns to and the
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“enormous … gross … diseased” (121) body she consequently develops physically
manifest both the pernicious limitations imposed on the mentality and physicality of
young women, and Joan’s “rage, helplessness and sense of betrayal” (52) in confronting
them. Yet her escape to England and movement away from her repressive childhood
spaces signal her desire to evade the deadly teleology of the Red Shoes Syndrome;
Atwood’s pregnancy with her daughter Jess while writing Lady Oracle likely inspired her
decision to revise the novel’s original plot, which “start[ed] with a fake suicide and
end[ed] with a real one” (“A Question” 45), and to imagine how female and artist
identities can be conjoined to less tragic ends. Influenced by a different type of female
inheritance from her Aunt Lou, which offers her a monetary reward if she is able to
recover her health, Joan is exposed to the possibility of returning to art and of starting a
new life, and then lives, for herself. Reluctant to repeat the disappointments of her earlier
attempts at creative expression through dance, Joan turns to writing but only by working
explains, her resolution to maintain her identities as both woman and artist “but to keep
the two roles separate” (463). Moreover, while numerous critics have addressed the
importance of the Red Shoes Syndrome as a paratext of Lady Oracle, absent from such
discussions is a sustained examination of how Joan’s obesity aligns with the self-harm
anticipated by the Red Shoes Syndrome, and how her projecting her creative talents onto
contributing such elements to the novel’s exegesis, this discussion indicates how, for
Joan, “it wasn’t more honesty that would have saved [her] … it was more dishonesty”
(37).
117
Joan’s beginning her autobiographical recollection of her childhood with the
remembrance that her mother named her after the Broadway dancer and actress Joan
Crawford illustrates her early sense of herself as an artist figure. Her induction into Miss
Flegg’s dance course at the age of seven affords her the opportunity to consummate this
gesture for a mother and an opportunity for Joan to become “less chubby” (43). While
Joan initially pursues her artistic potential in an indirect manner by “goggl[ing] at the
china music-box figurines … and imagin[ing] [herself] leaping through the air” (43), she
soon ventures to embody this ideal and to develop her abilities by “practice[ing] for hours
in the basement, the only place [she] was allowed to do it” (44). Yet the studio space that
Joan similarly relies on to cultivate and expand her creative abilities doubles as the arena
in which others endeavor to inculcate restrictive lessons about how to perform femininity.
Similar to the water-color painting that Joan envisions young women learning in finishing
school and that serves as a vehicle to instill “self-control” (10), Joan’s dance classes,
which were “largely a matter of drill” (44), are a means to indoctrinate young girls with
circumscribed ideas about how to conduct and display the female body. For Miss Flegg,
“the final effect was everything” (47-8). From the backstage preparations, in which
young dancers learn the art of “painting … faces” (47), to the rehearsed numbers, in
which girls practice “salutes” and “delicate flittings” (45) while ironically harnessed with
wings, the culture at Miss Flegg’s dance studio is one in which young women are created
While the lasting impact of such restrictive lessons on Joan are witnessed years
later in her admission that she wants to fit “into a mold of femininity” and that she covets
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the “fluffy skirt … glittering tiara” (103), the incompatibility between Joan’s childhood
self—with her artistic aspirations and unconventional female physique—and the ideals
instilled by such lessons is immediately evident. Her body spills over the seams of her
dance costume’s tight bodice, and she appears “obscene, senile almost, indecent” (46) in
such prohibitive clothing and conditions. Yet the show goes on, and when Joan’s
unseemly appearances land her an improvised role in the annual spring recital, the
mothball dance that she is forced to perform becomes one of “rage and destruction,” a
disaster that she “bump[s],” “stamp[s]” and “flop[s]” (50) her way through. The
overwhelming applause that Joan receives predominantly from the “fathers rather than
mothers” (50) in the audience, and which she later recognizes was in response to her “not
being taken seriously” and being regarded as merely “a flawless clown” (286), is
deeply gender-coded. More precisely, while women such as Miss Flegg and Frances
artistic performance as a marker of the phallocentric creative tradition, and thus Joan’s
erratic and crude performance as a sign of female failure and ineptitude within the
creative realm.
In her recollections, Joan concedes that she had since birth been a “plump” (43)
child; however, it is only after perceiving the untenability of pursuing her art as a woman
that she recalls adopting markedly self-destructive eating habits, thus confirming Susie
Orbach’s observation that eating disorders are a “response by women to the conditions of
their upbringing and the wider social world” (15) and “their attempts to deal with the[ir]
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attempted to abstract Joan’s obesity, 140 her excessive eating poses an important
hermeneutic challenge, given that it must be read on both a literal level as a threat to
Joan’s physical well-being, and on a figurative level as a metaphor for Victoria’s fatal
jump in front of a train. During her initial viewing of The Red Shoes film, Joan’s
“munch[ing] faster and faster as [Victoria] became more and more entangled in her
dilemma” (my emphasis 82) is rendered as the locomotive that eventually claims
Victoria’s life. Despite the numerous warnings she receives over the dangers of unhealthy
eating from both the living (70, 209) and the deceased (108, 118), including her Aunt
Lou’s fatal heart attack after years of libertine eating habits, Joan continues her perilous
eating less from a desire for wholeness and fulfillment than from a recognition of their
impossibility. The seemingly endless catalogue of unhealthy foods that Joan consumes in
immoderate quantities, including “half of an orange layer cake” (69), a “double helping
of french fries” (70), “chocolate cake” (87), “wads of pink cotton candy and greasy
popcorn” (89), “a triple-decker Kraft Cheese and peanut butter sandwich” (98), “five or
six hot dogs and … a few Honey Dews” (115), “nine orders of fried chicken in a row “
(122) and later a “Family Bucket” of “Kentucky Fried Chicken” (272), “all the dry
doughnuts and pieces of fish-glue pie [she] could afford” (141), and even “half a chicken,
a quarter of a pound of butter, a banana cream pie … two loaves of bread and a jar of
strawberry jam” (177) in a single sitting, illustrates how Joan’s excessive consumption is
prolonged self-destruction is devalued by Frances, who argues that if one were serious
she should “stick a gun in [her] mouth and pull the trigger” (73); however, Joan’s
protracted means of self-harm suggest that she is attempting to extend not her own
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suffering, but that of others. Though she fantasizes about her “lethal energies” (217) and
longs for “something horrible [to] finally happen [to her]” (62), she additionally wants
One of the most enduring effects of Joan is the manner in which she forces
readers to confront the body that “cramps, sweat[s], burp[s], fart[s]” (319), the
physiology of excess consumption, and thus the injury that her habitual over-indulgence
enacts against herself and, in some circumstances, others. 141 As Gavin Fairbairn makes
clear, self-injury “can be harmful to people other than the person who [harms] himself …
sometimes, indeed, [self-harm] may be intended to harm others” (162). In their readings
of Lady Oracle, Pamela Bromberg, Sarah Sceats and J. Brooks Bouson argue for how
Joan’s binge eating is employed as “a weapon” (21, 101, 67, respectively), drawing
repeated notice to the ways in which Joan’s acts of direct violence against the self in
over-eating can further be seen as indirect acts of psychological harm against her mother,
whom she holds accountable for her impossible subject position as a female artist. 142
Joan imagines that her mother, in offering her an artist’s name and a means to pursue her
conventionally feminine, “thin and beautiful” (88), is singularly responsible for her
existential crisis; 143 according to Joan, it is her mother that “betrayed [her]” (49), rather
than her society that enables and perpetuates such restrictions on women. Practicing acts
of violence that are simultaneously direct and indirect at a young age teaches Joan how a
singular gesture of violence can create multiple indirect victims (59), and even enables
destroy himself in order to prove to [Joan] that [she] was destructive” (257). Attempting
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to convey to her mother her feelings of betrayal, Joan parades her body in “clothes of a
peculiar and offensive hideousness, violently colored, horizontally striped” (my emphasis
87) and that create a “rotund … effect” (88), suggesting how Joan actively seeks outfits
that dually emphasize her anger and unhealthy physique. Such displays of her daughter’s
obesity effectively reduce Frances to fits of tears and alcoholism, yet similar to other
through her conspicuous corpulence, thus leaving her mother confused and crying,
Recognizing that her violent efforts had driven her mother to madness, rather than
understanding, Joan, with the support of her Aunt Lou’s two-thousand-dollar inheritance
that she receives after losing one hundred pounds, escapes her self-injurious eating habits
and family home and almost immediately reclaims her creativity. During her first night
away from home, Joan lodges at the Royal York and is inspired by the hotel’s “fairyland
(136). Yet the recently liberated Joan, fearing to retrace her earlier traumatic experiences
with artistic expression, creates a projected identity as a survival strategy against the Red
Shoes Syndrome that enables her to pursue her creativity in a society that has taught her
the deadly consequences of such an endeavor. In the words of Eleonora Rao, Joan’s
writing “allows her to explore a plural subjectivity and it is her writing that will enable
her to live through this division, this split” (“Margaret” 142). Similar to Penelope, who,
in The Penelopiad, conceals her transgressions by displaying them openly, Joan learns to
keep her artist identity a secret by projecting it out into the open, and further manages,
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desire that she “change into someone else” (55). Yet the identity of Louisa K. Delacourt
that Joan projects to publish her Costume Gothics while in England denotes Joan’s
reliance, more broadly, upon the multiple inheritances from her Aunt Lou, rather than
those of her mother, her desire to “be free not to be [her]self” without becoming
“anything too different or startling” (139). Taking her cue from other female artists,
including Joan Crawford, whose “real name was Lucille LeSueur” (42), her raucous and
defiant Aunt Lou, who performs as the public face for a health guide on female puberty
in which her image appears “smiling maternally … professionally” (85), and even the
“inventive” (44) Miss Flegg, whose solution to problems is to create a “special, new
person” (48), Joan creates a “second self” (137) that offers her vicarious access to her art
and enables her to write fictions that, she later learns, are a vital “escape for the writer as
Similar to the manner in which she conceives of her readers desperately turning to
her romances, “neatly packaged like ... painkillers” and consumed “quickly and
discreetly” (34) to provide the necessary escape from reality, Joan imagines her
projective identity as a liberating and discrete space that enables her to engage her
creativity secretly while in her everyday life pursuing the conventional dreams of
“settl[ing] down somewhere … hav[ing] children” (213) that she has been taught to
“vulnerable … position” (Margaret 67) suggests that Joan’s solution to the problem of
her creativity is more tenuous than she initially imagines. To the extent that Joan
imagines her creative self, her “shadowy twin,” existing in “that other world” (246)
psychically apart from her own, claiming that she had “always tried to keep [her] two
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names and identities as separate as possible” (33), she mistakes the degree to which she is
profoundly affected by the prejudices against, and obstacles inhibiting, female creativity
that she continues to encounter as a grown woman. During her English affair with Paul,
who presumes that all women “‘believe that life is babies and sewing’” (158), Joan is
initially able to keep her two lives separate and thus deflect the derogations launched by
her lover that women artists are “wise” to doubt their creative abilities and to “not delude
[themselves] with false hopes” (147). 145 While on one hand she feigns “ha[ving] no
talent” (147), with the other Joan is able to complete her first novel, The Lord of Chesney
Chase, by spending her afternoons researching alone in the costume galleries of the
Victoria and Albert Museum. Yet shortly after disclosing the source of her independent
income to Paul, thereby evincing her inability to entirely dissociate from her projected
identity, Joan is forced to admit the unstable divide between her ostensibly independent
worlds. Paul’s now more fervent abasements of her writing as “cheap and frivolous”
begin to affect Joan on a personal level, leading her to concede that she was not “a
serious writer” and that she finds “other people’s versions of reality very influential”
(160). While living, or as she terms it, “playing house” (216), with Arthur Foster, the
dangerous permeability between Joan’s two identities is again made evident when she
relates how the troubles faced by Louisa fail to remain externalized and begin resonating
in her everyday life as Joan: “As long as I could spend a certain amount of time each
week as Louisa, I was all right … But if I was cut off, if I couldn’t work at my current
Costume Gothic, I would be mean and irritable, drink too much and start to cry” (213).
Deeply unsettled by the pervious boundaries surrounding her creative world, Joan
looks to the spiritual realm to conjoin her bifurcated self. The practice of automatic
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writing that Joan is introduced to during her visits to the Jordan Chapel is proclaimed by
Reverend Leda Sprott as a means to contact the “other side,” which she later claims is a
place “where all the final reconciliations will take place” (204). Similar to the Virgin of
Lost Things in Cat’s Eye, who, according to Molly Hite, is “above all an agent of
writing bears the promise of unity for Joan, and affords her an opportunity to heal her
fragmentation. Despite Leda’s intuition of Joan’s “Great powers” (112) for this practice,
however, Joan’s experimentation with automatic writing disappoints both Leda’s and her
own expectations and ultimately perpetuates, rather than resolves, the problem of her
divided worlds. While the title, “Lady Oracle,” 146 given to the collection of poems Joan
produces through automatic writing symbolizes how she pursues this form of writing as a
means of reconciling her conventionally female and creative selves, the enduring
separation and incompatibility between these two realms is apparent in the ruptured line
that occurs in Section Five of the collection, in which Joan offers the description of a
During her voyages to the other side of the mirror, Joan finds herself “walking
along a corridor … I was going to find someone. I needed to find someone” (220),
motivated by the belief that she would discover “the truth or word or person that was
mine, that was waiting for me” (221). Yet the dissociated creative self that Joan seeks to
reclaim constantly eludes her, leaving her unable to “get to the end of the corridor” (222),
and the psychic space that she enters through automatic writing quickly becomes sinister
rather than restorative, threatening to trap her “in the midst of darkness, unable to move”
(223). More importantly, the words that Joan inscribes during such experiments further
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alienate her from her creative self and portend her return to violent tactics. In her various
poetic imaginings of deadly “icicle teeth” (226), the words “‘throat,’ ‘knife,’ ‘heart’,” and
an “enormously powerful” but “unhappy” woman (my emphasis 222), Joan evinces how
her automatic writing does not facilitate her progression beyond her divided self, but
rather, her regression to the troubled and violent spaces of her past, wherein she evokes
powerful images that revolve around eating and the harm it does to the body when done
to excess. 147 The collection of poems that ultimately emerges from her automatic writing
bears a “half-likeness” to Joan that “ma[kes] [her] uncomfortable,” and the lines that she
produces “without being conscious of [writing]” (220) seem to constitute a parody of the
writing process, since, as Atwood explains, “writing is not like having dreams. It’s not
that unconscious. It’s much more deliberate” (“A Question” 48). As such, Joan half-
heartedly attempts to further dissociate from her creative gestures by publishing her
collection using the projected identity of Joan Foster that she identifies as a collation of
“Arthur’s name” and “[her] own” (232), indicating once again Joan’s reluctance to create
a projective identity that is “too different or startling,” while further revealing how her
efforts to coalesce her disparate selves have ended in their further division. Julie Fenwick
explains that this fragmentation results “largely from [Joan’s] need to conceal from others
… aspects of her personality that she believed they would find unacceptable” (61);
however, Joan’s discomfort with the unheimlich qualities of her poetry suggests how the
goal of her fragmentation is two-fold, aiming to delude both others, and herself.
Shortly after Joan’s publicity interview with Barry Finkle on Afternoon Hot Spot
“Lady Oracle” becomes an astounding success, yet the numerous accolades and
attentions Joan subsequently receives intimate how others attempt to wrestle control of
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her projected artist identity and the exegesis of her art. In describing “Lady Oracle” as a
work within the masculine tradition of “Rod McKuen and Kahlil Gibran” (238), Joan’s
readers sever her from her female tradition that includes Aunt Lou, whose attempts at
automatic writing enable her to produce “a few letters” (113), and Leda Sprott before her.
In other words, while Frank Davey optimistically characterizes Joan as one who
“believes that she can step outside of social codes, whether class or gender based”
(“Atwood” 234), such a depiction of Joan as escape artist overlooks the manner in which
her artist constructions escape from her, forcing her to relinquish authorial control.
Ironically defeated by her success in the media, Joan reflects upon what has become of
her projected self in the hands of others: “it was as if someone with my name were out
there in the real world, impersonating me, saying things I’d never said but which
appeared in the newspapers, doing things for which I had to take the consequences …
She wanted to kill me and take my place” (250-1). This sense of being haunted by one’s
dissociated identity calls to mind Freud’s description of how that which is projected
outwards “returns from without” as an externalized threat to the self, and adds layers of
emphasis 237).
Contributing to Joan’s sense that she has lost control over her artist projection are
the numerous ways in which her dissociated identity is forcibly thrust back upon her.
Making the easy connection between Joan and the “Lady Oracle” poet that Joan has
irresolutely attempted to conceal, and retracing the connective lines between the
individual and her projection that dissociative strategies are supposed to render
indiscernible (but that for Joan never are), various male readers assume Joan’s
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autobiographical intensions in “Lady Oracle.” 148 Resembling the autobiographical bias
that Atwood satirizes in The Blind Assassin by prolonging her readers’ belief that Iris’s
The Blind Assassin novel is Laura’s true account of her affair with Alex Thomas, Joan’s
friend Sam, claiming he is “not a metaphor man” (235), reads “Lady Oracle” as a gloss
on Joan’s troubled marriage and her illicit affair. Following his “displeased” (227)
evident by the manner in which he treats Joan “as though [she’d] committed some
unpardonable but unmentionable sin” (235). Even the Royal Porcupine initially mistakes
Joan for her poetic subject when he asks, “‘Are you Lady Oracle?’” (238), although it is
likely that his query is posed ironically at this point to highlight the subtending bias in
interpretations of women’s art. Lamenting her failed governance over her projected
selves and her inability to “turn off [her] out-of-control fantasies” (251), Joan is plagued
by her increased visibility and exposure and admits the futility of “thinking you’re
Recognizing her failure to conjoin or control her projected identities and the
impossibility of living without them, Joan seeks the means to be completely freed from
her multiple selves and her life of evasion, soon arriving at the solution that she could
“[pretend] to die so [she] could live” (315). Ironically, Joan’s final attempt to escape the
deadly teleology of the Red Shoes Syndrome by feigning her death in Lake Ontario is
interpreted by the media as her victimization by it. 149 In reading the newspaper coverage
of her death, she learns that she had “been shoved into the ranks of those other unhappy
ladies … who’d been killed by a surfeit of words” (313). Yet similar to the voices from
beyond the grave in the opening lines of “This is a Photograph of Me” (Circle) and The
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Journals of Susanna Moodie, Joan’s insistence that she “planned [her] death carefully …
to be neat and simple” (7) is a testament to her survival, and to her efforts to untangle
herself from what Cooke terms “the maze-like series of identities she has created”
(Critical 86). Attempting to conceive of a new life for herself, Joan describes her rented
flat in Terremoto, Italy as the “Other Side” (309), thus reflecting the way in which she
envisions her feigned death, like automatic writing, as a means to collect together her
“dangling threads and loose ends” (293). Yet similar to her earlier efforts to evade her
difficulties rather than confront them directly, Joan begins this new life with a further act
of dissociation; as she explains to her landlord Mr. Vitroni, she is a richly endowed
woman pursued by “someone … trying to kill [her]” (326). This pursued woman and her
pursuer, however, are not entirely a fabrication (indeed, none of Joan’s projections is
entirely disconnected from reality) and her assailant can be read not as the invasive
reporter Joan attacks with a Cinzano bottle, but as Joan herself, whose on-going attempts
at self-denial lead her to feel increasingly as if she is “getting rid of a body, the corpse of
someone [she’d] killed” (20). Paradoxically, her projective efforts that began as a means
of self-defense against the fated script of the Red Shoes Syndrome in the end become a
ceases to struggle against her diversity and submits to viewing herself as characterized by
fluidity and variegation. While Joan had earlier been influenced by Brown Owl’s
admonition that she “‘must learn to control [her]self’” (58) and the ironically “small,
crumbly voice” of her fortune cookie conscience telling her “It is often best to be oneself”
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recognizing that she will never “be a very tidy person” (345), and learns to view herself
presuppositions of the Red Shoes Syndrome, which configure the female artist as wholly
invested in her internecine feminine and creative selves, Joan’s valuing each of her
simultaneous selves, and even in her recognition that “there were as many of Arthur as
there were of me” (211), Joan proposes that there remains no individual ego to defend, no
essential self for her dissociative efforts to shelter from the destructive effects of internal
conflict. Giving concrete expression to Rao’s observation that Lady Oracle ultimately
process and change” (“Margaret” 133), the colony of ants that gather in the small puddle
of sugar water that Joan shapes “to see [her] name spelled out for [her] in ants” (21)
suggests that Joan is perhaps no more than the sum of her many components, yet cannot
***
With her publication of Cat’s Eye more than a decade later, Atwood continues her
examination of the Red Shoes Syndrome and the dissociative techniques female artists
employ to avoid its tragic end. Situated generically as a Künstlerroman and fictive
autobiography, Cat’s Eye is narrated by the middle-aged visual artist Elaine Risley who,
not surprisingly, is given the name “Joan” in the early drafts (“The Ravine”), thus
suggesting the conceptual continuity between Atwood’s female artists despite their
working in different media. Demonstrating her further similarity to Joan, whose travel
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occasions her looking back on life, Elaine uses her return to Toronto for her retrospective
years. During these explorations, Elaine describes how the androgynous behaviors and
dress that characterized her childhood summers in the forests, where her father’s
entomological work required him to wear “heavy pants tucked into the tops of woolen
work socks” and her mother’s attire “wasn’t all that different,” contrast with the rigid and
deeply gendered spaces of Toronto, where Elaine’s family spent their winters and where
her “mother’s legs … appeared, sheathed in nylons with seams up the backs” (34).
Despite the ostensible avant-gardism of urban life, the young Elaine while living in
angels or monstrous madwomen first articulated by Gilbert and Gubar, 150 who discern
that such figurations create an “obsessive imagery of confinement,” forcing female artists
to “feel trapped and sickened both by suffocating alternatives and by the culture that
created them” (64). Moreover, the self-destructive behavior that Elaine turns to in
response to the seeming untenability of her becoming an artist, and her similar failures to
meet impossible female conventions, suggests her dangerous encounters with the Red
Shoes Syndrome. Confronted with the impossibility of her subject position, Elaine faces
an existential crisis that is narrowly escaped only through the use of projective strategies
that ultimately prolong, rather than resolve, her feelings of nihility and that continue until
beginning.
The childhood games of staring that Elaine and her girlfriend Cordelia play in the
opening pages identify Elaine as one who engages her world through her vision. She is,
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as Judith McComb writes, a “seer-narrator” who “sees, from early childhood on, in vivid
right-brain images of shapes and colours; a self that will in adulthood become the artist”
(9). This privileging of visual perception is made evident in her evaluating drawings not
on their accuracy but on their use of color (35), her developing ability to “see in the dark”
that her brother Stephen tells her is an invaluable faculty, since “You never know when
you might need to do this” (26), and her fascination with the Brownie box-camera that
she receives for her eighth birthday. However, the first image that Elaine captures with
her new camera—which bears a striking resemblance to the photograph of the young
Atwood used as the frontispiece of The Door (2007)—is a portrait of herself standing
outside of her family’s motel cabin appearing “as if [she’d] been put there in front of the
door and told to stand still” (27). Unlike Atwood’s portrayal of photography in The
Edible Woman as a means to empower the artist, enabling Peter to “[pull] the trigger” and
fix Marian “indissolubly in that gesture … unable to move or change” (272), the adult
Elaine’s interpretation of her early photograph evinces how she regards her early gestures
of visual expression as coincident with others’ demand for her obsequience. Elaine’s
resentment towards this imposition upon her artistic vision is similarly demonstrated by
her childhood self when she re-examines the photograph one month after it is taken and
views her captured and postured image as a “shrunken, ignorant version of [her]self”
(55), thus offering an early indication of how Elaine learns to resent and attack herself for
More precisely, such reflections make clear that Elaine’s artist identity is
cultivated alongside her growing understanding of the societal disdain for female artists.
The deterrents against female creativity, writ small in Carol Smeath’s “piano teacher
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hit[ting] her fingers with a ruler if she gets a note wrong” (48), are rendered more visible
in the general perception of the creative homeless women on the Toronto streetcar as
lunatics. With their “power[s] of invention” (5) and their “hats that look like stage
deviancy and those of Toronto in the 1940s, and Toronto’s rigorous efforts to reinstate
traditional gender roles and a sense of order in the aftermath of World War II. Moreover,
the madwoman artist, described by Gilbert and Gubar as a carrier of “unhealthy energies,
powerful and dangerous arts” (29), betrays society’s repudiation of female inventiveness
that the young Elaine is conversely drawn towards, yet learns to approach with
of this bias against women’s art (and thus the dangers inherent in her pursuits) in
reflecting how, “With a slight push, a slip over some ill-defined edge,” her public image
could be transformed into that of “a bag lady” (386). The psychological violence of
Elaine’s girlfriends, and of Cordelia in particular, that aims to punish Elaine for her
stepping outside of the impossibly narrow path of feminine behavior signals to Elaine
that she is under constant surveillance, and instills in her the belief that femininity means
strict obedience to a set of rules ensuring “no end to imperfection … to doing things the
wrong way” (138). Yet while “Letting yourself go is an alarming notion” (277) for most
women, 151 it a necessary lesson for the artist; according to Atwood, art is inherently
intractable and “uncontrollable,” and the artist is one who “see[s] life as complex and
mysterious, with ironies and loose ends, not as a tidy system” (“If You Can’t” 21).
Similar to the women on the streetcar who refuse to “[resign] themselves” (4), Elaine
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learns that her artist’s vision is best expressed when she risks pursuing divergent ways of
viewing the world, and recognizes, as her art teacher Josef Hrbik explains, that the
of madness and aberration, then the ideal female is perceived as an angel, a chimerical
figure Atwood imagines is free from “human failings” and devoid of “any kind of
Gilbert and Gubar as the “antithetical mirror image” (28) of the monstrous madwoman,
the angel appears in the narrative not as a celestial but as a distinctly domestic and
virtuous figure most clearly embodied in Mrs. Smeath, whom Elaine later depicts in
Rubber Plant: The Ascension surrounded by angel stickers, “laundered little girls in
white, with rag-set curly hair” (86). Typically encountered by the young Elaine wearing
print housedresses and resting on the living room chesterfield so that Elaine was never
certain if she was “still alive” or not, Mrs. Smeath becomes embalmed in Elaine’s
memory as one who was forever “lying unmoving, like something in a museum” (58).
Such recollections not only suggest the antiquated nature of the angelic ideal and the lack
of individuality it ensures, but further point to its associations with death that, like
Victorian conventions of female suicide, forcibly relegate death to the female realm
where it can be objectively scrutinized by men. As Gilbert and Gubar similarly argue, the
female ideal of “‘contemplative purity’ evokes, finally, both heaven and the grave” (25).
parallels Atwood draws between the angel of the house and the angel of suicide she
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describes elsewhere in her mini-fiction “An Angel.” More precisely, Elaine’s recollection
of Mrs. Smeath as one whose skin “looks rubbed raw as if scrubbed with a potato brush”
(57) and her use of egg tempura to compose this rendition mirror Atwood’s description of
the “angel of suicide,” who “has no face to speak of … the face of a grey egg” (“An
Angel”, Good 110), thus evincing Atwood’s sense that Mrs. Smeath’s submission to the
For Elaine, this threat of self-destruction likewise exists for the female artist who
is unable to escape the feminine ideal, and is thus caught between desire and duty. Like
Joan in Lady Oracle, who grows to treasure “images of [her]self exuding melting
femininity and soft surrender” (140), Elaine acknowledges the influence her female peers
and her immersion into an intensely gendered urban society has had upon her, conceding
that she has begun “to want things [she’d] never wanted before: braids, a dressing-gown,
a purse of [her] own” (54). Years later, the conventional greeting Elaine records on her
answering machine, in which her voice is that of “an angel … placid and helpful” (41),
further confirms to her that she has effectively internalized the female code. Yet
discovering her place in this tradition for Elaine means recognizing the ways in which
such female conventions conflict with her identity as an artist. Rendering problematic
Laurie Vickroy’s isolation of Elaine as a figure who “develops as a woman artist with no
known predecessors” and as “an outsider rebelling against traditional views,” Cordelia’s
mother initially appears as an exemplary model for Elaine to emulate, a synthesis of both
the female and artist worlds. Appearing to the young Elaine in a painting smock, “a
smudge of apple-green on her cheek,” Cordelia’s mother maternally greets Elaine during
one of her visits by offering her a “cookie … in the tin” (117). Elaine’s notice, however,
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of her “smile of an angel,” the unsettling manner in which she “drifts by,” and even
Cordelia’s referring to her mother as “Mummie” (117), indicates the failure of Cordelia’s
mother to balance the roles of artist and domestic angel. Moreover, Susan Strehle’s
reading of Cordelia’s mother as one whose “object-status” has limited her to “produc[ing]
‘pretty’ things to hang on the wall” (169) identifies that both she and her art have suffered
femininity, Elaine’s sense of self is increasingly destabilized, and she soon rationalizes
that if she cannot be either of the two identities she has relied upon to define herself, then
she is, in the words of her pre-pubescent self, “nothing.” Demonstrating her resemblance
to Offred in The Handmaid’s Tale, who similarly imagines herself as “Zilch” (172), and
to Zenia in The Robber Bride, who is described as “nothing” (78), Elaine consequently
came to connect with myself, as if I was nothing, as if there was nothing there at all”
(41). Here, her desperate attempts to use simile to represent her sense of herself as a non-
being clearly illustrate the complete lack of signification she feels within, and thus her
need to draw on outside constructs in her efforts at self-representation. Yet the empty
vehicles that she grasps at in creating such figurations merely reflect back her feelings of
nihility and futility. This state of nothingness that Elaine confronts, compounded by
Cordelia’s various abuses of Elaine that “made [her] believe [she] was nothing” (199),
and inadvertently by her father’s conservationist philosophies which teach Elaine that
while living in the forest she should “make it look as if [she hasn’t] been there at all”
(22), 153 results in Elaine’s decreasing ability to use language. The morning after her
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Sunday dinner with the Smeath family—during which she was once again trapped
between her need to obey the rules of feminine etiquette and her inclinations to see the
absurdity of her world—Elaine’s teacher, Miss Lumley, observes the deteriorated state of
Elaine’s handwriting: “the letters are no longer round and beautiful, but spidery, frantic,
and disfigured with blots of black rusty ink” (127). Similarly, Elaine’s lack of interest in
her mother’s alphabet soup and its edible letters, which she used to arrange into words
and even her own name but that now “taste like nothing” (136), demonstrates her
increasing aphasia and the Lacanian connection between language and selfhood which
insists, “Man [sic] speaks … but it is because the symbol has made him man [sic]”
(Lacan 65). This emphasis on the primacy of language to subjectivity identifies that while
Elaine may draw on visual rather than linguistic media to express her artistic vision and,
as Atwood intimates, hold a “distrust [of] words up to a point” (“Struggling” 176), her
selfhood remains inextricably linked to the symbolic order, where the deterioration of one
The various acts of self-directed violence that Elaine soon begins to inflict upon
her body initially appear as testament to her efforts to destroy the body that lingers on
after her sense of existential death and her finally falling victim to the fatal prognostic of
the Red Shoes Syndrome. The compulsion to destroy her body through acts such as
burning her hand on the toaster’s “red-hot grid” (119) frequently overwhelms Elaine, and
while she is at times able to resist such urges, she more often submits to them. In a habit
that she continues throughout her childhood, Elaine peels the skin away from her feet in a
manner that resembles a ritualistic practice: “I would begin with the big toes. I would
bend my foot up and bite a small opening in the thickest part of the skin, on the bottom,
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along the outside edge. Then, with my fingernails … I would pull the skin off in narrow
strips. I would do the same to the other big toe, then to the ball of each foot, the heel of
each. I would go down as far as the blood” (113-4). Such recurrent attacks upon her body
enable her to commit to memory this self-destructive act, and she is soon able to peel the
skin away from her feet and fingers “without looking, by touch” (118) and “in the dark”
(181). Appropriately, the hands and feet that Elaine targets in her self-harm rituals are
those necessary to the dancer in The Red Shoes film and to her own visual art. Yet it is
soon apparent that Elaine’s self-injuries are performed to a very different end than that
anticipated by the Red Shoes Syndrome. That is, Elaine’s repeated gestures of self-harm
are not used to ensure her annihilation, but rather, her self-sustenance during moments
when she is overwhelmed by the threat of non-existence, thus reflecting what Vigdis
and differentiation” (19). In this regard, Elaine’s efforts to dis-figure her body
simultaneously re-figure the symptomatology of the Red Shoes Syndrome and the
cultural belief that violence against the self is invariably self-destructive. As Elaine
explains, the “pain gave [her] something definite to think about, something immediate. It
was something to hold onto” (114) when her disintegrating selfhood was no longer
adequate in providing this necessary stability. Later, she adds that her self-destructive
acts are a way of reclaiming control, and “of delaying time, slowing it down” (119),
thereby postponing her encounters with the hostile urban society outside her family
home.
from the threat of non-existence are, however, ultimately inadequate to mitigate or solve
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her existential crisis. Surrounded by the widespread attempts of a city (and, more broadly,
a nation) to reinstate social order in the wake of global unrest, Elaine’s on-going war with
herself and with her female peers over her inability to imbibe the female ideal exposes
how freedom from one kind of threat can incite others, as well as the dangers of
accepting her mother’s presupposition that “war will never come here” (24). 154 The
suicidal gestures that Elaine eventually deliberates in daydreaming about “eating the
deadly nightshade berries from the bushes … drinking the Javex out of the skull-and-
crossbones bottle … jumping off the bridge” (155), or “throw[ing] [her]self in front of
the Princess’s car” (160), threaten to become a reality when she begins to imagine death
as the ultimate immunity, a state where “No one can get at [you]” (144), 155 and to
practice self-asphyxiation as a new way of stepping sideways “out of time” (171). 156
Reaching her nadir in the bottom of the ravine near her home, Elaine is forced by
Cordelia to descend a steep hillside ending in a barely frozen creek to retrieve her hat,
and her subsequent fall through the creek’s surface and into the frozen waters below
marks the point at which she succumbs to her feelings of nihility. Rather than responding
to her fall with an attempt at survival, Elaine imagines that she will become “dissolved”
into the “water made from … dead people” that rushes around her: “I will be a dead
person, peaceful and clear, like them” (188). Similar to Duncan’s submission in The
Edible Woman to the wintry Toronto ravine that allows him to feel “as near as possible to
nothing,” and that he describes as “close to absolute zero” (292), Elaine surrenders to her
feelings of self-dissolution in the ravine and is only narrowly saved by a Virgin Mary
figure who beckons her to safety, and who she initially perceives as Cordelia (189). 157
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Following this pivotal scene, in which Elaine reaches the depths of existential
cast her conflicted selfhood onto Cordelia, 158 a strategy that is explained by both
metaphysical and psychoanalytic frameworks, the former of which have taught Elaine
that “The body is pure energy” (240) and that “energy [can be] passed between” (233)
individuals. In “Living in Space,” an uncollected essay written five years before the
publication of Cat’s Eye, Atwood theorizes the relationship between space and time by
detailing how, prior to the child’s awareness of time, she regards herself as a discrete
entity that is demarcated by the surfaces of her physical body. However, Atwood
suggests that when the child consciously enters time and begins to recognize the
inconstancy of her world, she discovers that she and her human and non-human
surroundings are “made space[s] and can therefore be re-made” (“Living”). Atwood adds
that “From then on … [the child] can begin to re-create, [her]self among other things, by
how “the space [she] takes up does not end with the outer surface of [her] skin”
(“Living”). This exegesis clarifies how Elaine’s abiding Cordelia’s imperative to “count
to a hundred … Before coming up” (187) from the ravine forces her to consciously enter
into temporality, and thus recognize her ability to alter and manipulate her identity, and
the individuals and objects in her environment. In moving beyond her earlier mis-
understanding of time as constancy and her belief that “Time will go on, in the same way,
endlessly” (186), Elaine gains an awareness of the mutability of herself and of her world,
and is consequently enabled to extend herself into her surroundings through projection.
Elaine’s looking at her world in this new way, evident in her notice of the ravine bridge
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that is now “different-looking” and of lights “not like any … [she’s] ever seen before”
(189), further reflects Atwood’s insistence that “Revision, of our spaces as of everything
passing through a mirrored surface to enter into an alternative space frequently appears in
Atwood’s fiction to signify entry into a shadow self, 159 suggesting how Elaine’s fall
beneath the creek’s icy surface similarly denotes her passing from one body into a
projective other. Divorcing herself from her creativity, Elaine relinquishes her interests in
her camera, which she has “ha[sn’t] taken any pictures with … for a long time” (203),
disdain” (235) for collections of “china and housewares” (234), summarily rejecting both
realms by favoring a pair of “flat ballerina shoes … that scuff as [she] walk[s] and bulge
out at the sides” (234). Yet as these modes of identification fade from Elaine, she
increasingly notes their presence in Cordelia, including her “tak[ing] up moderate pinks
… going on diets” and her “performance” (243) around boys. Through this strategy of
dissociation, Elaine places onto an external figure the discordant elements she feels are
claiming that “Nothing hurts anymore” (189). Yet the impossibility of Cordelia making a
similar claim is ensured by the numerous acts of brutality Elaine begins to inflict upon
her. Moreover, while much has been said of Cordelia’s childhood attacks against Elaine
and their deleterious effect, relatively little has been said of Elaine’s adolescent assaults
on Cordelia, and few have ventured beyond retributive explanations to speculate on why
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Elaine commits such acts. Addressing this critical oversight, this discussion argues that
embodiment of the elements Elaine has rejected and distanced herself from, reflecting
horror onto women” (16). Aiming her “verbal danger” (234), “mean mouth” (235) and
externally directed violence that continues, on some level, to represent the harm Elaine
had enacted, and might otherwise be compelled to further enact, against herself.
nothingness and of lost selfhood. Appearing more than ever during this projective phase
as an empty vessel drained of its vital contents, Elaine’s narrative “I” appears to remain
constant only on account of her narrating such events retrospectively from her somewhat
reclaimed sense of selfhood in the present. 160 Signs of Elaine’s paradoxical absence from
her physical presence variously appear in her observation, while looking into Cordelia’s
sunglasses, that she is not reflected by, but “There … in her mirror eyes” (my emphasis
303), 161 and in her repeated failures of memory (108, 200, 232, 333); if Elaine’s aging
mother is “no less alive because dying” (396), then the converse might be said of Elaine.
Yet Elaine’s graveyard storytelling with Cordelia years after her ravine incident comes
closest to revealing the truth of her hollowness and her growing dependency on Cordelia
as a figure imbued with her sense of identity. While considering the ways in which the
body can continue to appear alive, growing hair and fingernails, for a time after its
demise, Elaine explains to Cordelia, “I’m really dead. I’ve been dead for years” (233),
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and characterizes herself as a vampire who relies on the vitality and blood of another.
This borrowed blood, however, does not give Elaine new life, but merely perpetuates her
death-like state, and when Cordelia finally disappears from Elaine’s life years later
following her internment at the Dorothy Lyndwick Rest Home, Elaine is left with
“nothingness washing over [her] like a sluggish wave” (372) and attempts suicide by
cutting her wrist with a razor. 162 The unsettling image the young Elaine witnesses at the
Conversat of the embryonic twins suspended in formaldehyde, their veins injected with
colored rubber to render visible how “their blood systems are connected” (169), might
have offered Elaine a powerful portent of the fatal ends in store for those whose lives
Man and The Robber Bride, respectively, and her suggestion of Brian the Still-Hunter’s
similar end in The Journals of Susanna Moodie illuminate her sense that suicide is far
from an exclusively female practice, although Elaine’s surviving her attempt at her life
intimates how some women are more fortunate than their male counterparts, or perhaps
how women’s means of suicide are typically less extreme. In any event, Elaine, following
fertile starting point for her new life and relocates to Vancouver. In recognizing how, in
the words of R.D. Lane, “Zero has a dual potential. It can be viewed simply as nothing or
the point at which all possibilities exist” and how “Out of nothing can come absence and
presence, negation and knowledge, denial and acceptance, lack and fulfillment” (81),
Elaine is enabled to “Gradually … grow back, into [her] hands” (377), and to return to
her painting. Yet she does so at the cost of growing apart from her female community,
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thus indicating her choosing one dimension of her identity over another and her attempts
to return to the androgyny that characterized her life in the woods prior to her family’s
move into the city. This decision has left readers such as William French to characterize
admirers,” 163 and further illuminates the difficulty of establishing a space for violent
women within feminist discourses. 164 Like Joan, who remains “wary of any group
composed entirely of women” (Lady Oracle 87), Elaine admits that “Sisterhood is a
difficult concept for [her]” (345), 165 and attempts to un-learn the externally imposed rules
of femininity that she was forced to adopt at a relatively late age, 166 rather than
assimilated into. As a result, Elaine imagines herself as “an exception” (280) to the dicta
and challenges presented to women, including that of the Red Shoes Syndrome and the
archetype of the female artist as madwoman, both of which she learns to confront not
with submission, but with satire: “If I cut off my ear, would the market value [of my
paintings] go up? Better still, stick my head in the oven, blow out my brains. What rich
art collectors like to buy … is a little vicarious craziness” (86). Yet her attempts to place
herself outside of potentially pernicious female codes and communities are never entirely
successful, given that her paintings and creative vision emerge from her ongoing tensions
with these same realities, and that the spaces of creation are frequently indistinguishable
from those of destruction. While Elaine falsely claims that she uses women as art objects
because she adopts the tradition of “Painters paint[ing] women” (90), the
interconnectedness between Elaine’s artist and female identities reveals the complexity
and enduring quality of these elements of her selfhood, and suggests how the fluid
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identity that Joan achieves by the end of Lady Oracle is not so easily procured by all of
***
In The Blind Assassin, Atwood returns to the artist’s coming of age and fictional
according to Coral Ann Howells, “about the terms by which identity is constructed”
(“Transgressing” 144). Yet in this instance, the narrative is variously hybridized by the
influence of the “villainess [novel]” (Cooke Critical 137), detective fiction, science
betokening how Atwood intends for the identity of the artist to be more difficult to
discern in this narrative than in her earlier works. Beginning with the first-person
narration of Iris Chase and ending with her voice from beyond the grave, the novel
unfolds through three overlapping narrative lines: a frame text, in which the eighty-two
year old Iris records her life story and ipso facto offers a chronicle of twentieth-century
Canada, a second narrative line in which the modernist novella “The Blind Assassin,”
ostensibly written by Laura Chase, appears, 167 and a third that offers the speculative
fictions told by the unnamed male lover in “The Blind Assassin.” Through this double
mise en abîme, the contexts and content of women’s literary art are explored in a fashion
similar to that of Lady Oracle, in which the divide between fiction and reality is uncertain
and thus repeatedly transgressed. The further resemblance of the two narratives in their
opening reference to a female artist’s suicide that is not what it at first appears
additionally suggests that Atwood is picking up a narrative thread that she began more
than two decades prior in her description of Joan’s staged drowning in Lake Ontario.
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More precisely, while Laura’s fatal drive off a bridge initially appears as conclusive
evidence that proves her falling victim to the Red Shoes Syndrome, it more aptly begins
the story of how Iris, the true author of “The Blind Assassin,” avoids this end through
acts of displacement. Faced with the challenge of negotiating her creative aspirations
within a society that offers women a circumscribed and inhibitive relationship to art, Iris,
like Joan and Elaine before her, turns to dissociative designs as a means of self-
remain conversant with Freudian theory, The Blind Assassin marks a rhetorical shift
towards the Girardian displacement of threat onto a sacrificial victim, thus further
suggesting that the Red Shoes Syndrome is not an inescapable fate for the female artist,
If Lady Oracle marks Atwood’s attempt to depict the female artist’s looking
backwards from early adulthood, and Cat’s Eye the female artist’s proleptic narration
from middle age, then The Blind Assassin is Atwood’s effort to capture the elderly female
writer as she contemplates her artistry and life entire, from before her birth to beyond her
death. Yet the transparency of Iris’s artist identity has been disputed by critics such as
Alan Robinson and Earl Ingersoll, the latter of whom characterizes Iris as an
however, overlooks the manner in which the aging Iris’s identity as artist is apparent
early on through her self-reflexive descriptions of herself writing her memoirs, which she
initially imagines is for an audience of “Perhaps … no one” (43). While she later
identifies her intended reader as her granddaughter Sabrina, Iris’s early claim, which
suggests her lacking a motive for diverging from the “truth” of events, 168 disguises the
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creative license she takes in recording history, and her tendency to offer “half-truth[s] at
best” (38).
inclination of the young Iris, given the aging Iris’s efforts to appear “upright and
contained” (43) in her memoir, and to obscure her unseemly struggles with the world of
female artistry that ultimately lead her to commit selfish and perfidious acts. Similar to
forestall recognition of her indirectly murderous behaviors, Iris’s lengthy frame narrative
appears to tell all about her past, yet obscures much. Despite her efforts to remain
“innocent until proven guilty” (210), evidence of Iris’s writerly identity seeps into the
narrative through her “clumsy” fingers, and her pen that “wavers and rambles” (43), 169 to
reveal her deep sense of pleasure in receiving her first fountain pen at the age of thirteen:
“how sleek it felt, how blue the ink made my fingers. It was made of Bakelite, with silver
trim” (42). Similarly, Iris recalls her early delectation in exploring her Grandfather
Benjamin’s library, with its “marble Medusa over the fireplace” (58) and sensuous
leather-backed books with “titles stamped in dim gold” (154-5), although she attempts to
conceal her pleasures by referring to such items as “obsolete Victorian splendours” and
by highlighting Laura’s creativity in coloring in such books according to her “strange but
very definite ideas about which colours were required” (157). Following her marriage to
the industrial magnate Richard Griffen and her subsequent placement under the watchful
eye of his sister Winifred, manifestations of Iris’s artistry become even less discernible,
conveyed indirectly through the unnamed woman in “The Blind Assassin” (who we later
learn is Iris’s representation of herself when with her lover Alex Thomas), 170 and, in
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Iris’s memoir, through gardening and thoroughly sanctioned performances of feminine
success and thus her own security, insists to Iris that she must “dress the part, no matter
what” (235). Moreover, while the woman in “The Blind Assassin” highlights the
enable her to conceal her affair from her family, Iris’s memoir highlights the
“make something, from whatever unpromising materials” (296), such circumscribed uses
of Iris’s creativity limit her to living a life as woman but not as artist. In other words,
The societal prohibitions against the female artist that give rise to Iris’s
transmuted expressions of creativity are evident in how the women of Port Ticonderoga
are shaped into consumers, rather than producers, of art. Iris describes her Grandmother
Adelia, whose “smooth as silk … cool as a cucumber” (59) appearance is perhaps less a
performance than a genuine reflection of her assimilation of female conduct, as the figure
Benjamin’s money “like oil” (59). A descendent of an established family, Adelia makes
prudent selections of “authentic” pieces of statuary for the gardens, and of French
mantelpieces, William Morris wallpaper, and imported Tristan and Iseult stained-glass
windows for the interior. These purchases are intended to showcase the wealth and
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Ontario high society’s nouveau riche. Like the domestic angel in Cat’s Eye, which
enculturation was believed to “make [her] better—a better person” (59), thus revealing
the underlying constants informing the various proscriptive roles for women, 171 and
suggesting that the refinement Adelia symbolized was always in part a refinement of the
soul. 172
Yet the distinction between the objects of art consumed by women and the
women themselves is never entirely clear in Iris’s recollections, indicating how her
artistry is further inhibited by the societal constructions of woman as objet d’art. 173
More precisely, despite Adelia’s role in populating Avilion with refined, and thus
refining, cultural items, Benjamin situates her amongst such objects as “concrete
evidence” (60) of his civility, and discourages her from committing public displays of her
bodily practices, such as eating, that prove otherwise (60). Substantiating Iris’s claims for
the potential “tyranny of Art” (145), this reification of women’s bodies highlights
Orbach’s observation that “women are schooled to relate to their bodies as their objects
art. Yet it is not men alone who sustain this restrictive understanding of women and their
relationship to art, but women themselves, who, according to Gilbert and Gubar, are
capable of “‘kill[ing]’ themselves … into art objects” (25). Like Elaine, who perpetuates
her fears of “turning into” (269) the objectified female body she has witnessed in her life
drawing and Art and Archaeology classes by imagining herself to paint women in a
similar manner, Iris speaks of herself in the third person and critiques her body as she
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would a displeasing aesthetic object when examining her wedding photo: “A young
woman in a white satin dress cut on the bias, the fabric sleek, with a train fanned around
the feet like spilled molasses. There’s something gangly about the stance, the placement
of the hips, the feet, as is her spine is wrong for this dress—too straight” (239).
Iris insists upon the interiority behind their representation by explaining how their
expressions convey their fear of their father’s “threat and … disapproval” (160). The
wedding photo suggests that she views her marriage to Richard, like Adelia’s betrothal to
Benjamin, as an imperative to stop gazing outward at her world and to become an object
Cordelia’s mother, initially suggests to her the possibility of negotiating a space between
art and femininity, and renders Callista a beacon of hope for the young Iris: “I was in awe
of Callista because she was an artist, and was consulted like a man, and strode around and
shook hands like one as well, and smoked cigarettes in a short black holder, and knew
about Coco Chanel” (147). Here, Iris’s praise for Callista lay not in her numerous
opposing realms that Iris had been taught could not be bridged. Yet Iris’s repeated
femininity by framing her as a figure of madness, “two bricks short of a load” (147), and
Winifred’s doubting her artistic ability in describing her as “The one who thinks of
herself as an artist” (my emphasis 391)—demonstrates to her that she had been deluded in
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her early hopes. Iris’s witness to Callista’s subsequent efforts to disguise her femininity
as “Cal” (185) further highlights how the female artist’s lack of belief in her creativity is
often entrenched in, and communicated through, female lines. Indications of Iris’s
tendency towards the Red Shoes Syndrome and self-directed bodily violence, seen in her
efforts to remain “as sickly as [she] could for as long as possible” (441) while living with
Richard, and in her contemplating suicide by jumping off the Jubilee Bridge (140), 174
thus appear as her attempts to secure an immediate and individual solution to a long-
standing societal problem. Similarly in “The Blind Assassin,” the woman longs for
destruction, but for that of her mind rather than her body, “for amnesia, for oblivion …
Immolation,” revealing her awareness that “The real danger comes from herself” (261).
Such impulses towards self-harm mark the ways in which Iris has variously imagined the
obliteration of both her female body and her artist’s mind, and suggest that the past
disclosed through Iris’s writing is also, as Hilde Staels writes, a “history of self-
Yet Iris’s outliving nearly all of her kin, and her appearance in the frame narrative
as “the only survivor” (218), suggests that her instincts are more for self-preservation
than for self-annihilation. Numerous critics have looked to Iris’s writing of history as that
of the Scheherazade combating her own mortality, thereby situating her art as both a
motivation for her destruction and the means of her survival, 176 yet little has been said of
the way in which Iris turns to the projective mechanism of sacrifice as a means of
warding off the threat of her dissolution brought on by her artist identity. More precisely,
Iris’s use of Laura as a sacrificial figure through whom she can disencumber herself of
her artistry and female captivity, and thus pass the violence of her self-destruction onto
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another, reflects Girard’s understanding of how “violence is deflected and diffused in
human society” (285), and how aggression, “When unappeased … seeks and always finds
“projection wherein some victimized outsider becomes the alleged carrier” (37) of a
meaning onto designated and particular … subjects” (281), was originally conceived by
ensure its perpetuity by casting its violence outwards. Girard argues that the sacrificed
victim “diverts violence from its forbidden objectives within the community” (101),
given that “Violence is not to be denied, but it can be diverted to another object” (4).
development, Girard concedes that sacrifice can similarly operate on the level of the
individual, enabling one to side-step the deadly outcome of an internally divided self by
selecting a surrogate victim, defined by Girard as one who lives “outside or on the fringes
of society” (12) and who “submits to violence without provoking a reprisal” (86). 177 This
translation of the sacrificial mechanism into individual terms, however, complicates the
gesture as a devotional act, and the matter of designating a deity to whom such sacrifices
can be made. Can Iris, recognizing herself as a “false god” (The Blind 475), and her self-
preservation be reasons enough for the violence of sacrifice within Girard’s framework,
her survival a divine decree? Girard’s suggestion that there is “no object or endeavor in
whose name a sacrifice cannot be made” (8) appears to indicates so. In her interview with
Graeme Gibson, Atwood explains, “Everybody has gods or a god, and it’s what you pay
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attention to or what you worship. And they can be imported ones or they can be intrinsic
ones” (19).
Iris’s numerous childhood compulsions to enact harm against her sister, including
her desire to “hit her” (237), and to let her drown in the Louveteau River, as well as her
“push[ing] [Laura] off the ledge (97) surrounding the Avilion lily pond, can be regarded
as a prelude to the sacrificial violence she later inflicts upon her. Conversely, Laura’s
longing to “g[i]ve herself over” (166-7) to others, and her liminal status within Port
Ticonderoga due to her “odd, skewed element … that most people keep hidden” (89),
configure her as an ideal victim for the sacrificial mechanism. Moreover, she appears to
Iris as one who refuses to commit or perpetuate harm in any form, and who is greatly
distressed by the “ill will of the universe” (85), thus ensuring that the violence from
which sacrifice stems will not be sustained and that Laura’s sacrifice will, as Girard
Alex, who is made into a sacrificial victim to carry Port Ticonderoga’s anxieties over
socialist activities and “cold-blooded fanaticism” (215), the soldiers of World War I, who
are sacrificed to ensure the perpetuity of “God and Civilization” (77), the aristocratic
Snilfard virgins on the planet Zycron, who, according the male lover in “The Blind
Assassin,” shed their blood to “replenish the five waning moons” (28) that prevent
starvation, and even Iris, who is coercively offered to Richard in marriage in order to help
settle growing disputes between Norval and his factory workers, Laura is represented as
one sacrifice among many, yet the only sacrifice selected by Iris to resolve her conflicted
sense of self, and to mend her feelings of rupture. Paradoxically enabling Iris to place the
threat of self-harm behind her by enacting harm against another, Laura is regarded by
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critics such as Fiona Tolan as one who is “instinctively drawn to the theme of betrayal
and sacrifice” (262), as witnessed in her imagining herself as Dido, who famously kills
herself “on the burning pyre or altar she’s made of all the objects connected to her
vanished lover” (The Blind 498). Yet Iris’s mention that this translation of Virgil was
completed “with [her] help” (498), and Laura’s repeatedly demonstrated inability to
comprehend figurative constructions (92, 141, 147-8), 178 suggest that Laura is perhaps a
Hearing the news of Alex’s death in World War II, Iris is faced with her now
certain confinement and the impossibility of continuing her escapes from the restrictive
female role she plays in her marriage to Richard. Where her affair with Alex afforded her
the opportunity to express her creativity and her “own ideas” (341), to transgress the rules
of female convention, to speak out against her “being examined” (123) and objectified,
and to go places where a “woman like [her] isn’t supposed to be caught dead” (25), 179 her
marriage constricts her to a life of “Worrying about the appropriateness of this or that”
(303) and becoming “lost to [her]self” (298). However, Iris’s resurgent inclination
towards self-harm, witnessed in “The Blind Assassin” and the woman’s responding to
news of her lover’s death by imagining “[her] grave” (466), is soon replaced by her
deferral of this selfsame impulse, and her seeking to escape her dangerous condition. In
selecting a sacrificial victim upon whom she can purge her feelings of female
confinement and thus deflect her violent impulse, Iris acknowledges that Laura and Alex
had similarly had an affair in which Laura was enabled to escape from the oppressive
Griffen household. As such, Iris is certain that her sister will suffer greatly in hearing of
his death, and thus, that violence can be done to her in bearing this news. The harm that
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Iris consequently inflicts upon her sister in presenting her with information that “push[es]
her off” (488) the ledge appears as the “‘good’ violence” that Girard insists “must
resemble the nonsacrificial variety” (37) in order to be effective, and further points to the
Iris later confirms that it was words that “quite literally” forced Laura “over the edge”
(490). The fading of Laura’s “light” (488) and her blanching immediately after this
revelation suggests the intentional ambiguity over when Laura’s demise actually occurs
and highlights what Sternberg Perrakis views as the “symbolic or literal” role “that the
protagonist plays in the murder” (my emphasis 350). Other critics, such as David
Ketterer, however, appear more certain about Iris’s culpability and her “responsib[ility]
Yet the maliciousness and spite that motivate Iris to accompany news of Alex’s
passing with that of her affair suggest that her sacrifice is tainted by her sororial jealousy
and contaminated with her human failings as a “false god,” pointing to what Sharon Rose
Earning Iris her title as one of the novel’s blind assassins 180 —a designation much more
suited to her than the novel’s original title, The Angel of Bad Behavior, since Iris notes
that “angels don’t write much” (498)—her failed sacrifice results in her being tormented
by her actions, rather than purified by them. The subtext of the Procne and Philomel myth
underlying the frame narrative offers an archetypal reading of Iris’s betrayal of, and
consequent haunting by, Laura, and foretells the tragic ends ultimately met by both
visitations from her sister following her unsuccessful sacrifice of Procne’s freedom to
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save her own, and both sisters eventually face their death. Laura’s final words, telling Iris
she will “talk to her later” (491), portend the night terrors and “apparitions” (35) Iris later
suffers, and expose her to how the dead “tend to repeat [themselves]” (491), a lesson Joan
and Elaine have similarly learned through their being haunted by Joan’s childhood and
projected selves, and Cordelia, 181 respectively. Committed to her own survival, however,
Iris attempts to live with her guilt rather than die from her regret following her failed
immolation. Similar to her effort to “be on the spot” (97) in order to claim her innocence
following her childhood pushing of Laura off the garden ledge, Iris, immediately
following Laura’s death, begins “concocting stories” (489) and returns home to ensure
her being present to defend herself against potential accusations. Later, Iris carefully
plans an appropriate costume for her visit to the morgue in deciding that she will need
“gloves, and a hat with a veil. Something to cover the eyes” (2). In an alternate reading,
however, this costume functions as a symbol of Iris’s continuing role as her sister’s
“blind assassin.”
her failed sacrifice of Laura, evident in her decision not to divorce Richard when leaving
him after Laura’s death, and in her packing her gardening books before her departure,
comes as no surprise and points to her continued suffering as a figure drawn between the
contradictory subject positions of the female and the artist. Again abiding her instinct to
remain “Out of harm’s way” (41), Iris turns to Laura once more to resolve her internal
conflicts, this time aiming to purge herself of her writerly identity and the potential for
self-violence it gives rise to. While Iris initially attempts to dissociate herself from her
writing of “The Blind Assassin” by imagining its composition through a “bodiless hand”
156
(512), her sacrifice of Laura in identifying her as the novel’s author in its 1947
publication affords her a more complete abdication of her artistry. More precisely, it is
Laura’s name that Iris does violence to with this act, which lingers on in Port
Ticonderoga as synonymous with one who, despite her oddity, is believed to have fallen
victim to an “accidental death” (3), who was never “suspected … of duplicity” (196), and
who was a “lovely, dead young woman” (40). 182 Surrendering Laura in place of herself,
Iris is enabled to safeguard herself against the threat of the Red Shoes Syndrome by
creativity, thereby ruining a name that even Laura regarded as “So pure and so white”
(89). Significantly, the subsequent public attacks against “The Blind Assassin” as “filth”
and “muck” (40) seem leveled at its assumed author, rather than at the material object
itself, which “fluttered at the edges of the stage like an ineffectual moth” (40) during the
Iris later admits that she takes pleasure in witnessing the fallout of such
destructive gestures, “as long as [she] can watch it through the little secret window, as
long as [she] won’t be involved” (478). However, repeating the outcome of her earlier
sacrificial gesture, Iris’s attempt to dissociate herself from her artistry fails due to its
commingling with her desire to preserve Laura’s memory in publishing under her
name, 183 reflecting Robinson’s observation that Iris holds a degree of “psychological
entanglement with her sister” (347). Iris’s panic at the thought that, a mere few years
after her death, Laura had been “papered over … almost as if she’d never existed” (508)
contaminates and thus disrupts the sacrificial mechanism by confusing her victim, which
Girard claims must be expelled as a “polluted object” that has “sop[ped] up impurities”
157
(95), with a figure that she longs to preserve. In this sense, Laura’s childhood act of
crawling inside her mother’s sealskin coat in an effort to “conjur[e] [her] Mother back”
(137) is reiterated by Iris in her cloaking herself with Laura’s identity to create “a
memorial of some kind” (508). Offering evidence of her failed sacrifice, which Girard
explains occurs when “those whom the sacrifice was designed to protect bec[o]me its
victims” (40), are the public attacks that Iris receives following the publication of “The
Blind Assassin.” To Iris’s surprise, many verbal assaults are aimed not at Laura, but
directly at her: “The anonymous letters began. Why had I arranged for this piece of filth
attempted sacrifice of her sister, however, suggest that she does. Aiming to redeem her
image after revealing her dubious use of Laura’s name in publishing “The Blind
Assassin” and thus her role in Laura’s defamation, Iris calls her behavior many things: an
the confusion of meaning she attempts to create around her gestures and their exegesis. In
particular, Iris’s suggestion that her use of Laura’s name was an act of “justice”
indicating their collaborative writing of the novel can be read as her efforts to conceal the
injustice of her actions, given that Iris has elsewhere admitted to her “moral turpitude”
(512), and to being “[not] much interested in … fine ethical points” (499). In short, such
efforts to dissimulate her guilt appear as her attempts at “Getting the blood off [her]
hands, one way or another” (494), and expose the ritual pattern behind her failed
Iris’s attempts to resolve her internal conflicts and to be present at the end in order
158
leaving the “you” that she addresses, read as both Sabrina and the unknown reader “in the
future, after [she’s] dead” (43) that she earlier imagines, with the hermeneutic tasks of
unraveling the yarn she has spun. While Iris’s voice persists beyond her own demise,
appearing in the final paragraphs following the newspaper announcement of her death,
Iris ultimately relinquishes her authorial control in stating, “I leave myself in your hands.
What choice do I have?” (521), thereby passing on to the next generation the final
judgment of her actions and the problems faced by the female artist, both of which Iris
leaves unresolved. Unlike Joan and Elaine, who survive their struggle with the Red Shoes
Syndrome, Iris suffers the loss of her life in the end on account of the “imperfections”
(48) of her heart that disallowed her to settle her internal conflicts through the sacrificial
mechanism. Yet the mature age of Iris at the time of her passing and her having lived 83
years with her creativity undermines the Red Shoes Syndrome by suggesting that while
the existential troubles of the female artist cannot, in all cases, be entirely avoided, such
struggles are something to be lived through and endured as one pursues her art, rather
than submitted to as a death “sentence.” Speaking from experience, Atwood explains that
the female artist “need[s] to know [she] can sink, and survive it” (“Nine” 107).
fictions, Atwood offers multiple revisions to the Red Shoes Syndrome which expose its
unrealistic condensation of the female artist, highlighting what Showalter observes as the
“impressionistic and unreliable” nature of generalized “Statements about the personal and
psychological qualities of the woman [artist]” (A Literature 6). Beyond her refusing the
lethality of the syndrome by illustrating how women can draw on projective strategies to
deflect their compulsions towards self-violence, Atwood further re-envisions the basis of
159
the Red Shoes Syndrome by revealing how this condition highlights women’s troubled
relations with both men and other women. Where Powell and Pressburger’s film suggests
that Victoria’s suicide results from her being constrained by patriarchal delimitations of
the female role, Atwood’s artist fictions indicate that a woman’s relationships with other
women are both the means of her inheriting a sense of female creativity as a contradiction
of terms, and the connections she exploits in attempting to resolve this tension. The
various failures that Atwood’s female artists encounter in their projections, however,
leave intact both Atwood’s suspicion of theoretical frames and her disbelief in final
solutions, given that what appears as a resolution for one may entail disastrous
consequences for an Other. Further, the disparate ends that Atwood’s narrators arrive at
in their struggles with their creativity and female circumscriptions indicate how the
female artist exceeds the conceptual constraints placed upon her. As Elaine bluntly states
to her interviewer in response to her attempts to force the female artist into a procrustean
Notes
124
Atwood wore her red MBT shoes while reading selected poems at the Poetry Bash
event held on October 14 at the Vertigo Theater Playhouse.
125
While Atwood does not espouse essentialist understandings of the self (“A Question”
54; “Using Other People’s” 222; “Opening a Door” 142), or suggest that “being” a writer
is disconnected from “working” as a writer (“Uncollected Prose [B]”) she does propose
writing and womanhood as ways of being (“On Being”), and thus linked to women’s
existential experience.
126
Atwood and MacEwen first met in Toronto’s Bohemian Embassy coffeehouse in the
1960s, and, as Nathalie Cooke explains, “Over the next few years, Atwood and MacEwen
would share many conversations about the practical realities of becoming, and surviving
as, a female poet in the male-dominated literary world of their time” (Critical 8).
127
Although female suicide in the Victorian period was at times imagined as a moral
transgression, a consequence of poverty, or even a comic act (Anderson 207-8), Deborah
Gates confirms that “Most Victorians, whatever their class or education, had stock
assumptions about suicide: it was committed by the unhappy, the lonely, the lovelorn, the
mad, the ruined—all poor unfortunates at the end of an emotional tether” (40).
160
128
Showalter identifies that such suicides “included Eleanor Marx, Charlotte Mew,
Adela, Nicholson, and Amy Levy” (194).
129
Similarly, in “If You Can’t Say Something Nice,” Atwood explains that “combining
marriage and art was risky business. You could not be an empty vessel for two. The
instructions were clear: one genie per bottle” (17).
130
Also see Atwood’s “Dissecting the Way a Writer Works” (11) and her “Introduction”
to Women Writers at Work.
131
Contrasting with others’ problematic construction of a woman’s violence as her
shadow side that fragments her consciousness, this analysis argues that self-violence is a
result of, not reason for, self-divisiveness.
132
In “Poetry and Audience,” Atwood explains her use of pseudonyms for her literary
and visual art: “I published with initials, because I feared rejection as a ‘lady writer,’
which everyone knew was about as bad as a ‘lady painter’.” Also see “Nine Beginnings.”
133
Atwood’s father, Carl Edmund Atwood, was an entomologist and professor of
zoology, and her older brother, Harold Leslie Atwood, is a professor of physiology.
Further, Cooke explains that both Atwood and her brother “were good at science in
school, and by the time they graduated from high school their marks were about the same
in both science and English” (Biography 30).
134
While Christina Ljungberg, in her examination of how Zenia in The Robber Bride can
be seen as a “manifestation of each protagonist’s own repressed unconscious” (363),
highlights the violent woman as the object of projective fantasies, others, such as Nicole
De Jong, in identifying Cordelia’s “projecting her own feelings of being different on
Elaine” (101), have identified how the brutalizing woman additionally performs as agent
of such projections. Also see Alice Palumbo’s “On the Border” (84) and Sarah Sceats’s
Food, Consumption and the Body (119).
135
See “On Being” (195) and Cat’s Eye (377).
136
Also see Freud (14:184).
137
Also see Freud (13:61).
138
For example, see Coral Ann Howells (“Transgressing” 147) and Gayle Greene (168).
139
For example, see Sharon Rose Wilson’s Margaret Atwood’s Fairy-Tale Sexual
Politics (120), Cooke’s Margaret Atwood: A Critical Companion (92-3), Catherine
Sheldrick Ross (463) and Julie Fenwick’s “The Silence of the Mermaid.”
140
For example, Emma Parker argues that Joan’s “eating is employed as a metaphor for
power” (349) and Sarah Sceats maintains that Atwood employs eating practices as a form
of “political engagement” that “opposes social fragmentation and allays both individual
and cultural yearnings for completion” (7). Also see Cude (45).
141
In “Uglypuss,” Joel similarly over-indulges in “pizza, Kentucky Fried, doughnuts
from the Dunkin’ Doughnuts” (71) as a “kind of perverse rebellion” against his lover
Becka (72).
142
Joan’s existential anxiety is compounded by her overhearing, as a young girl, her
parents’ argument over her father’s failure to abort her mother’s pregnancy (77),
suggesting how Joan’s existential troubles are multiply determined.
143
Joan similarly holds her mother accountable for acts of shared injustice when she
blames her mother alone for a mutual decision between Frances and Miss Flegg to
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eliminate Joan’s role in the “Butterfly Frolic”: “I always felt that if my mother hadn’t
interfered Miss Flegg would have noticed nothing” (47).
144
Shuli Barzilai similarly finds that “Joan’s survival strategy has been to lead a double
life, compartmentalizing the functions of selfless wife … and secret writer of Costume
Gothics” (233).
145
This exchange is nearly identical to the conversation between the narrator of Surfacing
and her (now ex-) lover (56), indicating how Atwood’s artist fictions remain conversant
with one another.
146
This discussion differentiates between Joan’s collection of poems, “Lady Oracle,” and
Atwood’s novel of the same name by placing the former within quotations.
147
Significantly, Joan keeps “all the words [produced through automatic writing], and the
longer sections [she] work[s] out from them, in a file folder marked Recipes” (222).
148
Identifying this as a primarily “North American problem,” Atwood explains that the
autobiographical bias is largely gender specific and due to the “remarkably tenacious”
idea that women are “less capable of invention” (“My Mother” 72).
149
Joan’s feigned death similarly engages nineteenth-century conventions of female
suicide, which identified drowning as a distinctively female form of self-inflicted death
(Olive Anderson 19) and which presumed that female suicide was the tragic result of lost
love. More precisely, the tendencies towards an autobiographical reading of “Lady
Oracle” and the collection’s description of the female heroine’s dangerous love affair
with “a man in a cloak, with icicle teeth and eyes of fire” (226), when considered
alongside the alternate reading of Joan’s suicide as the result of the Red Shoes Syndrome,
suggest that Joan’s simulated suicide is a success to the extent that it offers the public
multiple red herrings.
150
Gilbert and Gubar’s illumination of this dichotomous positioning of women in The
Madwoman in the Attic (1979) was contemporaneous with Atwood’s writing of Cat’s
Eye, which was composed from a number of stories and short sketches written long
before the novel’s publication in the fall of 1988. See Cooke’s Margaret Atwood: A
Biography (297).
151
The evening of her retrospective exhibit, Elaine reflects on how the word “different”
is a sign of failed femininity, “the quintessential Toronto middle-class-matron putdown,
the ultimate disapproval” (351).
152
Elaine further observes that self-effacing gestures are a central part of the feminine
social script. While playing with Grace and Carol, Elaine learns that she is expected to
degrade her collage art while praising that which has been produced by her friends:
“Their voices are wheedling and false; I can tell they don’t mean it, each one thinks her
own [work] on her own page is good. But it’s the thing you have to say, so I begin to say
it too” (53).
153
As a result of this early lesson, Elaine is later compelled to feel “as if [she doesn’t]
exist” (68) while standing in the forest at night.
154
Ironically, the years of World War II that Elaine and her family spend in the woods,
“like nomads on the far edges of the war” (25), are a time of relative peace for Elaine,
while her family’s post-war relocation to Toronto marks her entry into a battle that she is
forced to fight on a daily basis against the prescriptive ideals of femininity.
162
155
Elaine’s encounter with a large dead raven that “looks at [her] with its shriveled-up
eye” (144) and thus offers her an opportunity to meditate on death as an opportunity for
escape, is in contrast to the narrator’s encounter with a dead heron in Surfacing, where
the heron’s “look[ing] at [her] with its mashed eye” (124) occasions her consideration of
violence as a waste of life and a lamentable, but unavoidable, part of human society.
156
The circumstances of fainting that Atwood describes in “Fainting” (Murder) bear a
strong resemblance to the context of Elaine’s initial experience with fainting (169-71)
and similarly describes this temporary loss of consciousness as a means of escape.
157
Chinmoy Banerjee similarly finds that Cordelia is “interchangeable with the image of
the Virgin Mary” (517) and thus represents the possibility of salvation for Elaine.
158
Thus revealing the reciprocal side to what critics have repeatedly noted as Cordelia’s
efforts to project her self-hatred onto Elaine. See McCombs (16), and De Jong (101).
159
For example, see Surfacing (151) and Lady Oracle (219-220).
160
Although, as Phyllis Sternberg Perrakis maintains, the middle-aged Elaine to a degree
faces her own “transience” and “evanescence” (349) that prompts her looking back in
time to gain a sense of groundedness, and thus suggests how the novel’s narrative “I” is
never an entirely stable subjectivity.
161
This description recalls Joan’s experience of going “into the mirror one evening” and
later finding that she “couldn’t get out again” (223), further intimating the ambivalent
nature of projective strategies.
162
The razor that Elaine uses stands as a symbol of the masculine artistic tradition, given
that she finds it on her ex-husband’s art workbench, offering a reminder that a
fundamental reason for her despair is her society’s engendering of artistry.
163
Also see Hite (137) and Gayle Greene (207-214).
164
Further illustrating this difficulty is Elaine’s feminist interviewer from the formerly
titled “Women’s Pages” who, seeking to discover the inspiration behind Elaine’s visual
art, acknowledges the reality of women’s anger and “stories of outrage” (90), yet
“Brightly and neatly … veers away from [discussions of] war” (89).
165
Elaine’s admission suggests her suffering from what Mihoko Suzuki terms
“sororophobia” (“Rewriting”).
166
See Atwood’s interview “Struggling with Your Angel” (174-5).
167
This discussion will differentiate between the contained narrative of “The Blind
Assassin,” which details the encounters of two unnamed lovers, and Atwood’s tripartite
novel of the same name, by placing the former in quotation marks.
168
Iris later states that “The only way you can write the truth is to assume that what you
set down will never be read. Not by any other person, and not even by yourself at some
later date” (283). However, she later admits that this ideal is “Impossible, of course”
(283).
169
The high cost of Iris’s clumsiness later becomes apparent in causing her to lose her
daughter Aimee to the care of Winifred (512).
170
The woman lover at times engages in storytelling (341-343) and describes “the blood
moving through her own heart” as “a word, a word, a word” (112).
171
Following her marriage to Richard, Iris’s visage calls to mind the blank features of
Mrs. Smeath as domestic angel to the extent that her face similarly appears “erased,
featureless, like an oval of used soap, or the moon on the wane” (The Blind Assassin
163
235), intimating how Iris is further shaped by the social forces urging women to become
de-individualized angels of the house.
172
While the elderly Iris claims that this assumed conjunction between cultural
knowledge and moral authority was confined to early twentieth-century society,
something that “people believed, then” (59), evidence of its continuation appears in the
Laura Chase Memorial Prize that Winifred endows following Laura’s death. Presumably
an attempt to display her cultural and moral refinement, Winifred establishes this prize to
award short stories that display “literary and also moral values” (31).
173
Iris’s description of the Arcadian Court, where a “men only” balcony allows male
customers to “sit … and look down on the ladies, feathered and twittering” (230), reveals
how public spaces were designed to reinforce this understanding of the female body.
174
As an elderly woman, Iris returns to the Jubilee Bridge and similarly considers the
“menacing potential” of the waters below while experiencing feelings of “breathlessness”
and of being “in over [her] head” (299). Also see (246).
175
Howells similarly characterizes Iris’s memoir as “a kind of bleeding to death”
(“Writing” 117) that she pursues willingly.
176
For example, see Howells (“Writing” 116) and Sternberg Perrakis (349).
177
For Girard, such attributes are necessary qualities of the sacrificial victim in order to
ensure that the violence which sacrifice aims to eradicate does not return, or become
perpetuated: “Every time the sacrifice accompanies its desired effect … bad violence is
converted into good stability” (266).
178
Marta Dvorak similarly argues that Laura “continues to take locutions literally, never
learning to decode linguistic conventions with their implicit and opaque dimensions”
(64).
179
Although the lovers’ mutual recognition in “The Blind Assassin” of the class
differences between them, and that “things ain’t even-steven” (125), suggests that this
relationship also has its shortcomings and challenges.
180
Cooke notes that “the three sections of the novel are dominated by three different
blind assassins: those described in the story told by the male fugitive of Laura Chase’s
novel, The Blind Assassin; Richard Griffen; and Iris” (Critical 140)
181
While the fate of Cordelia is left uncertain following her disappearance from Dorothy
Lyndwick Rest Home, her haunting of the middle-aged Elaine suggests Atwood’s sense
that those who have vanished, like those who have died, carry on in a “ghostlike demi-
existence” (Strange Things 19).
182
Such descriptions reflect Girard’s assertion that the sacrificial victim “must be neither
too familiar to the community nor too foreign to it” (271).
183
Here, Iris’s use of her sister’s name resembles Joan’s appropriation of her Aunt Lou’s
name in publishing her Costume Gothics. According to Joan, this gesture is intended as
“a kind of memorial to [Aunt Lou]” (157).
164
Chapter 4
… once you enter into social relationships, ethics has to come in.
and poetry of Margaret Atwood, and her recent publications are no exception. 184 Contrary
to Karen Armstrong’s assertion that “Today mythical thinking has fallen into disrepute” due
to our perception of such modes of thought as “irrational and self-indulgent” (2), Atwood,
in the novella The Penelopiad (2005) and the mini-fiction collection The Tent (2006), 185
rewrites traditional myths in order to demonstrate the enduring relevance of myth and its
utility in providing readers with a means to explore conventional and alternative ethical
Penelopiad redrafts the story of Homer’s Odyssey from the point of view of Odysseus’s
wife Penelope, and in the process reformulates cultural narratives of women, violence, and
justice in order to suggest that unconventional acts of violence call for unconventional
systems of retributive justice. Seeking to requite and to “write” the wrongs done by Helen
through her incitement of the Trojan War, Penelope manipulates her narrative to portray
Helen as a figure whose previous public acts of indirect violence parallel the emotive
cruelties she commits on a personal level in the present. The Penelopiad brings into focus
Penelope’s use of narrative justice to redress the erroneously idealized image of Helen,
165
exact a feminine form of “sentencing,” only to reveal increasingly that her moral authority
is not as flawless as she imagines it to be and to suggest the operation of other restorative
systems literally and figuratively at play in the narrative. Similarly, the mini-fictions
contained in The Tent frequently revise mythic plots in order to draw attention to the range
of female violence and to the ethical responses such acts necessitate. Yet unlike Penelope’s
construction of a narrative justice, which both disrupts and maintains judicial reasoning, the
myth narratives of The Tent look beyond masculine justice constructs by examining a
feminine care ethic that eschews retributive principles in favor of a moral system that views
sympathy and a sense of interconnectivity as central to ethical action. More broadly, despite
her extensive revision of traditional myths and conventional ethics through the figure of the
brutalizing woman, Atwood preserves and enriches the long-held understanding of myths as
stories which aid us in reaching an understanding of the enigmatic and difficult elements of
our world, in Atwood’s fictions defined in part as the violent woman and our ethical
responses to her.
fiction suggests the ways in which Atwood’s conceptualization of myth has been
influenced and shaped by Northrop Frye, who, in The Anatomy of Criticism (1957), posits
that mythic archetypes constitute the underlying pattern of literature across time and
space and that “myths explain the structural principles behind familiar literary facts”
(215). According to Frye, there exist a finite number of timeless images and structures of
meaning that provide the basic “grammar of literary archetypes” (135), where such
archetypal images necessarily include those of Classical and Biblical heritage, the latter
of which is “the main source for undisplaced myth in our tradition” (140). Atwood, in an
166
interview with Karla Hammond, clearly aligns herself with Frye’s delineations of myth in
asserting that the term “myth” does not “pertain to Greek myths alone,” since “traditional
myths means traditional stories that have been repeated frequently” and must therefore be
inclusive of “Biblical [myths that] have been very important in our society” (114-115).
Yet Atwood moves beyond Frye’s theory of “the mythical mode” (134) by demonstrating
how the archetypal “grammar” of literature, and more broadly language in general, offer
a space of play for the writer and an opportunity for the rewriting of grammatical rules
and precepts. Further, while Frye insists that mythical episodes, replete with pure
metaphorical activity, possess “an abstractly literary quality,” and “[give] up the external
analogy to ‘life’” (135) through their “abstract or purely literary world of fictional and
with a new dynamism by situating myths within quotidian settings and investing them
with the unexceptional issues of daily existence, which, common as they may be,
continue to challenge us. In addition to providing a world parallel to our own, mythical
realms, for Atwood, often coincide with everyday life and describe a place where
“grudges are held, vengeance is exacted” and “crimes … beget consequences years later”
(“Of Myths” 260). Through this system of action and reaction, transgression and justice,
myths in Atwood’s recent fiction describe a moral imperative and, as Armstrong notes,
valuable example of how Atwood both aligns with and advances Frye’s myth theory by
re-writing archetypes of female passivity and victimization and by suffusing her myth
with the everyday. Set in modern day Hades, The Penelopiad re-tells Homer’s famous
167
epic from the perspective of Penelope as she describes her daily thoughts and encounters
in the after-world, and offers a retrospective account of her previous life in ancient
Greece and her awaiting the return of Odysseus during his twenty year absence for war,
travel and adventure. Penelope’s difficult childhood, as the daughter of a selfish father,
Icarus of Sparta, and a negligent Naiad mother, is clearly seen to leave its deleterious
mark upon her, and ill-prepares her for the later challenges of single-handedly raising her
son, Telemachus, and ruling Ithaca, while dealing with the vast number of belligerent
Suitors who invade her palace in Odysseus’s absence. In Penelope’s struggle to maintain
the resources and honor of her kingdom, it is her maids, whom she likens to sisters, that
embody the greatest wellspring of support and stability and that later represent the chorus
of her narrative, while Penelope’s veritable kin, Helen of Troy, signifies the greatest
source of disruption in Penelope’s past and present life. As such, Penelope describes the
murder of her slothful Suitors and her ostensibly disloyal maids upon Odysseus’s return
at the end as an event of betrayal and bloodshed. Yet what Homer does not divulge, and
what Atwood’s Penelope does not explicitly identify, is that Odysseus’s slaughter was
also an event that was carried out with the help of unexpected accomplices, and which
conceals many secrets, indicating how Penelope, like Iris in The Blind Assassin, has
created a dubious narrative “not because of what [she has] set down, but because of what
informed by both Frygian theories and her own innovations, Penelope’s understanding of
at, and reasons for, employing justice measures in The Penelopiad, it is necessary to
168
observe how she is offered in Atwood’s narrative as a figure whose notions of justice
form a complex that responds to and integrates both present-day and ancient Greek
will be returned to later in this discussion, it is significant to note here how The
Penelopiad spans the two very different historical times of the ancient past and the
modern day present, thus indicating how Penelope has been inculcated with two disparate
notions of justice. Outlining the modern perceptions of justice that Penelope aligns with,
Elizabeth Kiss definitively states that justice is today understood as “the virtue or norm
by which all receive their due,” and as a process in which there is a “morally appropriate
distribution of social benefits and burdens, rewards and punishments, status and voice”
(“Justice” 487).
understanding of judicial principles and retribution. For the inhabitants of early archaic
Greece, justice was predominantly a masculine realm wherein little consideration was
given to a proportionate graduation of penalties, and typically brutal punitive acts were
external body. Preceding the development of courts, constitutions and inscribed legal
codes in the seventh century BC, Greece in the eighth century BC possessed “no written
laws or courts” and “Crimes were defined not by the state but by the accepted customary
norms of the kinship households that made up the society” (Tetlow 27). In the absence of
larger justice systems and regulatory laws, the duty of defining the criminal act and of
carrying out the punishments for inter-familial crimes fell on the victims themselves (or
on the household head of the victim’s family in the event of the incapacity, death, infancy
169
or female gender of the victim) or on the king following the occurrence of a state offence.
In both the Odyssey and The Penelopiad, the long-term absence (and potential death) of
Odysseus and the adolescence of Telemachus uniquely render Penelope head of both her
household and state and permit her growth into the traditionally masculine role of
choice[s]” (Foley 105), to settle disputes amongst her male suitors, 187 and Agamemnon’s
praise of Penelope’s “virtue” (24.195) and constancy (24.197) combine to suggest that
the refined judicial abilities of Penelope became a constituent element of, and in large
drink from the Lethean waters of oblivion, and as a result is herself consumed with the
injustices of the past, and in particular with Helen of Troy’s eluding of justice following
her provocation of the Trojan War. The type of violence that Penelope holds Helen
culpable for is one in which her violent actions exist in an indirect relationship to the
resultant harm, and which reflects Patricia Pearson’s insistence that women frequently
into “masters of indirection” (17). Reflecting Atwood’s earlier poetic attempts to work
through the image of Helen by depicting her as an erotic dancer who evokes the “bleary /
hopeless love” of her worshippers and who bears the warning, “Touch me and you’ll
burn” (“Helen of Troy” 34, 36), Penelope’s first mention of Helen protests her unfair and
preferential treatment amongst modern day conjurers and admirers despite her
“notorious” (20) deeds. From here, her thoughts rapidly move towards the indictment of
Helen as “a woman who’d driven hundreds of men mad with lust and had caused a great
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city to go up in flames” (21-22). Moreover, Penelope observes how Helen consciously
continues to drive men “mad with lust” through her tantalizing, yet ultimately immaterial,
apparitions before men that signify for Helen “a return to the old days” (20) and which
parallel the “mental torture” of the gods who inflict punishment upon the villainous dead
and then snatch them away” (16). Penelope’s arraignment of Helen, while clearly
concerned with linking Helen to the commencement of the Trojan War, is particularly
invested in revealing that “Helen was never punished, not one bit. … You’d think Helen
might have got a good whipping at the very least, after all the harm and suffering she
caused to countless other people. But she didn’t” (22). 189 While the Penelope of Homer’s
Odyssey mitigates Helen’s guilt by stating that “It was the god [Aphrodite] who drove her
culpability for her actions by exhibiting the intentionality behind Helen’s indirectly
violent acts and further constructs Helen into an appropriate recipient of justice by
undermining her ostensible genealogical connection to the gods, who, in Atwood’s text,
Unlike the ambiguity behind Helen’s admission of guilt and repentance in the
Odyssey, in which she admits to the “shameless creature that [she] was” (4.145)
magnificent entrance, Helen’s ruminations and stories of war in The Penelopiad clearly
“selfishness and … deranged lust” (76) that she finds responsible for enkindling Helen’s
actions, Penelope discerns Helen’s use of violence to communicate her agency and her
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power to effect widespread destruction. Penelope recalls that, in Helen’s recounting to
her the story of the Athenian War, the “part of the story [Helen] enjoyed the most was the
number of men who’d died” (75) since Helen insists that such men did not die “for
[her],” but “because of [her]” (154). Similar to the self-congratulatory tales Helen weaves
before an audience of Telemachus and Menelaus in Book 4 of the Odyssey, the stories
Helen relates to Penelope in The Penelopiad concerning her rebirths and “latest
conquests” in the world of the living further reveal the sense of self-affirmation Helen
achieves in recounting stories of the “men she’s ruined” and the “Empires [that] have
fallen because of her” (187). 191 Moreover, the intimate ties between Helen’s storytelling
and her experience of empowerment in violence suggest that the inherent capacity of
measure to bring Helen to justice reveals that this selfsame enduring quality of narrative
will also function towards the achievement and permanence of Helen’s downfall.
her a suitable recipient of justice, Penelope undermines Helen’s claims to being the
daughter of Zeus and brings to the fore the falsity of Helen’s reputed divine lineage, since
“crediting some god for one’s inspirations was always a good way to avoid accusations of
pride should the scheme succeed, as well as the blame if it did not” (112).
Acknowledging that Helen is “quite stuck-up” (20) about her presumed genealogical link
to the supreme deity of ancient Greece and the license to immorality that this creates in
Helen, where Helen imagines “she could do anything she wanted, just like the gods from
whom—she was convinced—she was descended” (76), Penelope attempts to give Helen
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a thoroughly human dimension, and ipso facto hold her accountable for her harms.
Similar to the humanization of Circe in “Circe/Mud Poems” (You Are Happy), 192
disassociate Helen from the gods of Olympus—who are described as “childish” and
themselves and “g[oing] to sleep” (24), and as such are both external to human justice
structures and inculpable for the “[human] suffering … they love to savour” (124) and
propensity of half-divine humans to escape the full experience of the human condition
and thus avoid “the full force of human pain” (99). This conscientiousness suggests that,
for Penelope, Helen’s capacity to experience the mental anguish of guilt is an integral
Yet Penelope is not solely concerned with holding Helen accountable for her
public and indirect malefactions of the past. Penelope’s repeated focus on Helen’s current
further interest in allocating moral blame for the personal and direct cruelties Helen
commits in the present. Helen’s use of psychological violence against Penelope suggests
that Helen has consciously tailored her acts of aggression to suit the vulnerabilities of her
victims. Given that Penelope is no longer a part of “the world of bodies” (4) and is thus
“beyond that kind of suffering” (24), Helen targets the less physical aspects of Penelope
that remain. Aiming to diminish Penelope’s sense of her own ingenuity, a trait Penelope
identifies as central to her identity, Helen insinuates to Penelope that her cleverness is a
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dubious attribute perhaps sustained by rumor alone (34), and further endeavors to
attention to her “short legs” (33) and by referring to Penelope through the epithet of
“little duckie” (33). While this diminutive commemorates Penelope’s rescue by ducks
after her father attempted to drown her, Helen’s reference to Penelope as “little duckie” is
Helen and her reputed genealogical connection to a seemingly more glorious father in the
figure of Zeus, who, in the guise of a swan, impregnated Helen’s mother Leda. 193
condescension” (153) to devalue Penelope, where Helen’s “lightest sayings were often
her cruellest” (33), highlights the duplicity characteristic of Helen, and of her self-
proclaimed “Divine beauty” (154), which imperfectly conceals the “septic bitch” (131)
Penelope’s focus on Helen’s use of cruel words as “her sting” (35), and her broad use of
judicial phrases and terms such as “aided and abetted” (122), “evidence” (123),
“witnessed” and “proof” (144), compound the suggestion that Penelope is consciously
acting as a moral agent and attempting to reckon Helen’s past and present, public and
personal transgressions.
that have targeted her and her family and by maintaining her position as arbiter and
enactor of justice assigned to her during her life in ancient Greece, 194 yet simultaneously
diverges from archaic modes of punishment, which, according to Elisabeth Meier Tetlow,
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“had to be immediate and simple, such as death, because there were no structures for
other forms of punishment, no prisons, and no currency” (21). Penelope’s use of her
narrative to “write” the wrongs committed by Helen works towards the opposite effect
which, through its inherent connection to narrative, enacts a more enduring and subtle
form of retribution. Similar to Iris Chase, who uses her writing to exact revenge against
her husband and sister-in-law in The Blind Assassin, and even Atwood herself, who
Nathalie Cooke insists employs “her pen as a weapon” (Critical 16), 195 Penelope offers
her narrative as more than a mere telling of events. Demonstrating the belated impact of
her Naiad mother’s advice to “Behave like water … Flow around [obstacles]” (108) and
to remember that “Dripping water wears away a stone” (43), 196 Penelope crafts a means
of exacting justice upon Helen by constructing a narrative which, through its dialogue
and descriptions, encircles and moves around the image of Helen in a fluid manner to
slowly erode her falsely flawless image, ultimately signaling Penelope’s taking
here is by no means direct or linear; rather, justice in the narrative operates through
Penelope’s gatherings of observations and responses that collectively redefine and correct
the idealized image proffered to Helen in the Odyssey and more recently in contemporary
culture. While Mihoko Suzuki maintains that poets writing after Homer, such as Virgil,
Spenser and Shakespeare, often recast Helen as a figure of duplicity and suspicion “to be
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hackneyed image of Helen as a figure of naïveté and goddess-like beauty that Penelope
narrative justice to the character of, and transgressions committed by, Helen. Unlike the
typical Suitor, whom Penelope describes as being staunchly resistant to the threat of
public defacement and immune to the “fear [that] the others would jeer at him” (107),
Helen is defined as a figure who “had a pair of invisible antennae that twitch at the
merest whiff of a man” (153) and who, as exemplified during the Trojan War,
sense of power, at times “just to show she could” (29). Not surprisingly, Helen is never
seen unattended in the narrative, reflecting her dependency on others to generate her
sense of self-worth and thus her vulnerability to the shifts in public opinion about her
promised through narrative justice. As such, Penelope’s effort to correct Helen’s public
image is a morally appropriate and thus modernistic approach to punishing Helen for her
past and present transgressions and, perhaps most significantly, to preventing the
notions of morality” and her observation of her fictional characters’ tendency to “judge
about the literary demise of Helen as paragon of divine beauty and womanly grace, yet in
her effort to do so, Penelope collapses evidence convicting Helen and judgment,
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corroboration and correction into one abbreviated act of justice. While Penelope directly
addresses her readers through the second person pronoun and thus invites, or more aptly
requires, them to bear witness to her narrative justice, the readers of The Penelopiad are
ultimately a silent jury, leaving Penelope to perform as judge, prosecutor and evaluative
jury as she works to reveal Helen’s culpability for her past and present acts of violence.
which she imagines that the dichotomies of good and evil, right and wrong, truth and
falsehood can, and should, exist in their unalloyed states; Karen F. Stein, in her
telling a story in order to name and blame an evil-doer recurs in different forms in
Atwood’s fiction” (“Talking Back” 158). Significantly, Penelope’s attempts to “name and
blame” Helen ironically work to expose her own guilt in acting as a Medusa figure who
transforms Helen’s elusive and mythic flesh into stone by depicting her as uniformly evil
and predictably malicious. Recalling the unnamed artist’s subject in Atwood’s short story
“Iconography,” whose appearances have been worked to excess and whose interior
thoughts and emotions are largely obscured by the artist’s repeated re-creation and
entirely overwrought that her surface manners and violent behaviors are assumed to
indicate an absolutely cruel and malign subjectivity. The various ways in which Helen
has been “framed” by both Homer and Penelope suggest that a predetermined narrative
has been imposed upon an ultimately indeterminate mythological figure whose vice, but
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Telemachus upon his return from visiting Helen and Menelaus, in which Penelope
foregoes all other interests in demanding from Telemachus an answer to her question of
“‘how did [Helen] look?’” (132), exemplifies Penelope’s broader tendency to overlook
the complex interiority of Helen in favor of examining her exteriority and manifest
actions.
Perhaps more pressing, however, is the recognition of how Penelope, through her
intent focus on Helen, unsuccessfully attempts to obscure and direct attention away from
her own indirectly murderous behaviors. Adrienne Rich’s observation that evasions of the
truth are “usually attempts to make everything simpler … than it really is, or ought to be”
(“Women and Honor” 188) illustrates how Penelope’s role as moral arbiter masks her
less esteemed and even lesser known behaviors and reflects the imperative stated in
“Murder in the Dark” that “The murderer must lie” (30). 198 As failed escape artist,
Penelope is unable to evade the guilt that she wishes to assign to others, or to withhold
and contain evidence of her own involvement in the deaths of the Suitors and her twelve
young maids. The oversights that Penelope enacts through her concentration on Helen
reconfigure the axiom that “justice is blind” and reveal that, unlike Teiresias “the seer”
(96) whose blindness is indelibly linked to his ability to see the truth, Penelope engages
in a selective blindness to certain realities that signifies her refusal to acknowledge her
Through small ruptures in the unity and coherence of her character, Penelope
reveals her self-representation as a laundered one, where her public projection of herself
as a figure of justice inevitably does an injustice to her own layers of complexity and
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Penelope’s performance of inculpability and her involvement in the murder of her
Suitors. Encountering Helen in the fields of asphodel en route to her bath, Penelope
thinly veiled form of verbal sparring, rapidly crescendos into Helen pointedly asking
Penelope: “‘Tell me, little duck—how many men did Odysseus butcher because of
you?’” (155). In focusing on the competitive undertones of the sharply posed question,
and in concluding, presumably correctly, that Helen is interested in comparing the death
tolls resulting from the Athenian and Trojan Wars with those resulting from the return of
Odysseus, Penelope is led to respond, “‘Quite a lot’” (156). In addition to Penelope’s off-
handed reply, which clearly exposes her intimate connection to the massacre committed,
Helen’s retort, in which she pointedly states to Penelope, “I’m sure you felt more
important because of it. Maybe you even felt prettier” (156), suggests how, for Helen and
paradoxically, her femininity. Less explicit indications of Penelope’s guilt appear in her
in Book 4 of the Odyssey and her consumption of an Egyptian potion to quell her
her seeming tendency to lose her narrative thread and in her casually stating, “Where was
I? Oh yes” (24)—deludes the reader into believing that her memory is a tenuous one.
More precisely, such ostensible failures of recollection obscure the fact that Penelope
holds deeply resonant and powerful memories which trouble the unimpeachable image
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Yet Penelope’s implication in atrocity is not confined to her involvement in the
massacre of the Suitors. After claiming that she “never would have hurt [her maids], not
of [her] own accord” (115), Penelope discloses that it was she who both told the twelve
young women “to hang around the Suitors and spy on them, using whatever enticing arts
they could invent” (115) in order to discover the plans of her increasingly menacing
guests, and who made the choice not to tell Eurycleia of her cunning use of the maids to
defend her status and properties. In particular, Penelope describes this latter decision as
“a grave mistake” (115), intimating how this act of non-disclosure led to Eurycleia’s
accusing the maids of high treason. While illustrating Atwood’s recognition of the
written word’s ability to perform as evidence, 199 such small and ultimately partial
diversionary tactics of localizing blame in Eurycleia, where Penelope insists that prior to
the slaughter Odysseus relied on Eurycleia’s assistance to identify the unfaithful maids
(145), and by her claims to self-defense. Such observations suggest that Penelope is
closely monitoring the degree of guilt she is opening herself up to. Looking back on the
events leading up to the execution of her maids, Penelope concedes that her “actions were
ill-considered, and causing harm,” yet immediately qualifies this statement with the self-
justifying claim: “But I was running out of time, and becoming desperate, and I had to
use every ruse and stratagem at my command” (118), thus demonstrating Penelope’s use
of the rebuttal processes integral to justice procedures that she elsewhere denies to Helen
mea culpa ultimately draw attention to Penelope’s guilt and blameworthiness in the death
of the Suitors and the maids. Yet such confessions also summarily reveal how Penelope
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is offering a red herring through many of her revelations and paradoxically attempting to
evade the reader’s recognition of her more damning crime through confessing to lesser
transgressions. In other words, Penelope appears fully aware that sometimes the most
effective place to hide is out in the open. Reflecting her earlier representation of Penelope
depiction of Penelope in The Penelopiad reveals Penelope’s identity as a text which must
work to demonstrate Penelope’s involvement in the deaths of her Suitors and maids, the
unauthorized and deeply intentional testimonies of the maids themselves provide the
voice, the maids expose how mythologies of Penelope’s virtuousness are based not on her
behaviors, but on the fact that she, like Odysseus, has “had the word / at [her] command”
(6). In a performance that both re-enacts a condemning scene between Penelope and
Eurycleia and that operates, paradoxically, as a paratext offering tentative answers to the
central questions of the narrative, the maids draw attention to Penelope’s extramarital
affairs and to the “Suitors [she] ha[s] not resisted” in order to reveal how their dangerous
knowledge of Penelope’s “every lawless thrill” (150) has led Penelope, in the company of
Eurycleia, to devise an intricate murder plot that will ensure their silence concerning such
matters upon Odysseus’s return. 200 Despite Penelope’s concerted efforts, in the previous
rendering the possibility of such extra-marital relations absurd and illogical, the thespian
maids in their drama expose how Penelope conscripts Eurycleia to perform in her scheme
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by pointing out to Odysseus “those maids as feckless and / disloyal” and by convincing
him that such women are “not fit to be / The doting slaves of such a Lord as he!” (150).
Implicitly agreeing with Eurycleia’s observation that this charge will most certainly lead
to the death of the accused maids, Penelope rests satisfied at the closing of the maid’s
performance, confident that this plot will allow her to remain “in fame a model wife”
(151).
Penelope’s truth claims, thus indicating the deeply self-reflexive quality of Atwood’s text
endeavored to restore. The persistent presence of the maids and their palimpsestic
of the past and the constructions of guilt that she attempts to assign to others. The biases
inherent in Penelope’s attempts at narrative justice generate the sense of a text that is out
of balance, and it is the persistence and variety of discourses that the maids represent, in
conjunction with their perpetual haunting of Penelope in Hades that leaves her in tears in
the end, which restores a broad sense of equilibrium. Frye identifies that “the righting of
the balance is what the Greeks called nemesis” where “the agent or instrument of nemesis
may be human vengeance, ghostly vengeance, divine vengeance, divine justice, accident,
fate or the logic of events, but the essential thing is that nemesis happens” (Anatomy 209).
Contextualized in this way, the maids can be read as ghostly agents of nemesis, rather
than righteous bearers of justice, that attempt to restore stability, an operative which is
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reinforced by what Frye identifies is the traditional role of the chorus in symbolizing the
“social norm,” or “the society from which the hero is gradually isolated” (218). As such,
the maids, who at one time represented to Penelope a supportive community of women
that were “almost like [her] sisters” (114), occupy a position that enables them to both
inflict alienation and isolation on Penelope in order to restore the balance disrupted on
The continuing dialogism between Penelope and her maids brings to the fore
several concluding, but certainly not conclusive, observations regarding the nature of
justice and blame in the narrative and Penelope’s claims to jurisprudence. Similar to
and to “spin a thread of [her] own” (4), yet simultaneously and unawaredly unweaves the
strands of justice created by exposing the frequently purblind nature of judicious figures
and processes. Penelope’s indelible acts of blindness, which enable her to retribute and
“sentence” Helen for her violent transgressions while overlooking her own culpability,
suggest how justice often fails to act upon the whole truth and nothing but the truth and,
moreover, put into question the possibility of truth itself, but not the need to lay blame.
While The Penelopiad, through its destabilization of truth, gestures toward the tendency
of blame to be multiple and shared, rather than singular, this deconstructive thread does
not suggest that blame is indeterminate or entirely relative. Atwood’s deep sense of
injustice in response to the various atrocities described in The Penelopiad and elsewhere
in her writing reveals that the questioning and disruption of truth should not negate the
need to lay blame and to hold individuals accountable for their actions. 201
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Barbara Hudson further identifies that conceptions of justice and penalty are
determined by “who has the power to say who is punished, whose ideas count” (6), thus
narrative authority suggests that the justice instantiated in the narrative is not done in the
perceptions and evaluations of villainy, injustice and retribution. This element of power
informing justice efforts ultimately acts to blur the division between restitution and
revenge, and between justice and violence. In other words, Penelope’s attempt to bring
vendetta against her, resultantly disfiguring, flattening and dismembering Helen’s image
that was once held in its entirety as an icon of beauty. In creating new modes of violence
and imagining new weapons, Penelope exemplifies the observations of the narrative
speaker in Atwood’s “Women’s Novels,” who discerns that women’s stories parallel
men’s stories that are about “how to get power. Killing and … winning and so on,”
except that in women’s narratives, “the method is different” (Murder 34). Reflecting her
assertion that “There is indeed something delightful in being able to combine obedience
and disobedience in the same act” (my emphasis 117), Penelope’s acts of narrative justice
reveal her moral agency as a self-serving weapon, thus destabilizing the widely held
understanding of restoration and revenge, and justice and violation as mutually exclusive
realities.
Yet the above discussion of The Penelopiad has suggested the ways in which
power is far from singular. While the title of Atwood’s novella and the framing of the
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narrative as an opportunity for Penelope to bring justice to Helen by “do[ing] a little
story-making” (3) for herself intimates that narrative authority is exclusively held by
Penelope and thus that all acts of justice will occur under her direction, the persistent
return of the maids’ unauthorized voices through the chorus chapters identifies that while
power is linked to the enactment of justice, power is ultimately multiple and manifold.
The maids’ similar attempts to enact retribution in the narrative for Penelope’s own
achievement of societal order. Rather, the maids’ retributive intentions reveal the
which indicates that justice is often not singularly and absolutely served, but continually
in pursuit of an unachievable ideal of order and social harmony. As such, Atwood’s text
indicates that in addition to Helen and Penelope, the concept of justice itself is put on trial
in the narrative.
***
narratives aim to revise both cultural assumptions about womanhood, which maintain that
a woman’s role in violence is as victim and witness, and classic and biblical myth plots
that construct male figures as central to narrative action. Yet Atwood’s revisionist myths
further engage in an intratextual discourse which suggests the need for a reconstruction
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of ethics and an expansion of ethical modes of thought beyond justice, thereby aligning
with Margaret Somerville’s assertion that “We need imagination to deal with [moral]
moral responses to acts of female violence and aggression, Atwood’s mini-fictions move
systems of retribution, moral autonomy and universal reasoning, in order to explore the
interconnectivity and contextual details. In doing so, such narratives illustrate how form
and content often misalign, and small stories, in refusing to remain limited to small
issues, deign to push past their textual limits to enter into complex ethical and moral
debates. Yet similar to the failure of feminized forms of narrative justice in The
Penelopiad to provide an ideal moral response to acts of female violence, the feminine
care ethic examined in The Tent is repeatedly frustrated and ultimately unsuccessful in
gender, the recognition of guilt as a construct which is frequently shared and multiple,
rather than singularly held, and the re-evaluation of singular ethical approaches to arrive
states that “myths can be used … as the foundation stones for new renderings” (“The
Myths Series” 58), thereby suggesting her belief in the capacity of myths to perform as
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such alternative moral responses are by no means exempt from critique themselves and
discourses by insisting upon both the need to find a suitable and central place for women
in theories of morals and ethical behaviors, and the necessity to expand understandings of
“women’s identity formation and their moral development” (3). Responding specifically
of reciprocal exchange and equity, and which consistently situates women at a lower
moral rank than men, Gilligan attempted to redefine moral reasoning to reflect the
traditionally female qualities of care and sympathy for others, and to find a central place
for these qualities in ethical discourses. Unlike Kohlberg’s model, which conceptualizes
universal and abstract principles such as justice, impartial reasoning and human rights as
central to the highest stages of moral development, Gilligan’s care ethics suggests how
responsiveness and receptivity to others are morally valuable and can similarly be central
to moral action and decision making. Gilligan’s model of ethics is premised on the idea
that women do not see moral problems as requiring impartial reason and objective logic,
different trajectory of growth, and that women evaluate moral dilemmas “in a different
voice.” According to Marilyn Friedman, the “characteristically ‘female,’ moral voice that
Gilligan heard in her studies eschews abstract rules and principles,” and the “substantive
concern for this moral voice is care and responsibility, particularly as these arise in the
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Beyond Gilligan’s specific objections to Kohlberg’s phallocentric
the latter of which traditionally advocates abstract principles, retribution, 202 and universal
reasoning over emotions and insists upon the exclusion of partisanism and sentiment
from the realm of ethics. Reiterating Gilligan’s view of the essential difference of male
morality, Andrea Maihofer explains that “According to Gilligan, the ‘male’ conception of
morality may be understood as an ethic of justice, while the ‘female’ conception can be
seen primarily as an ethic of care” (383). For Gilligan, justice ethics, or the male moral
approach, assumes that all interpersonal relationships are connections between equals,
and that each individual can, and should, possess complete moral autonomy, thus
between the genders, Gilligan suggests that “For boys and men, separation and
individuation are critically tied to gender identity,” summarily stating that “masculinity is
autonomy, individuation … natural rights” (23), blame and singular moral outcomes,
Sarah Hoagland, in her “Introduction” to her study of lesbian ethics, adds that the
“attraction to rules and principles comes in part from a desire to be certain and secure” in
one’s decisions, 203 and from a desire to have “everyone … conform” (11). Through such
claims, Hoagland intimates that justice ethics offer a moral minimalism that values a
stringent and systematic approach to the application of moral principles and rights
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Pointing out the inadequacy and self-defeating mechanisms inherent in such an approach,
Hoagland further posits that “Acting from principle interferes with rather than enhances
our ability to make judgments” (11) in everyday moral situations. While proponents of
criminal trials or warn of the dangers of “Acting from principle” in state justice systems
per se, 204 care ethic theorists do appear to suggest the need for individuals to recognize
and apply care and sympathy as moral responses in their everyday interpersonal relations
“Justice” 491) 205 and decreasing the need for the formal judicial processes extending
Gilligan offers a reconception of the individual that identifies each person not as
judgment and knowledge are valuable, Gilligan proposes that many women view these
principles from a different point of view, wherein the focus lies on how these elements
assist individuals in evaluating their competing responsibilities within the complex web
an understanding of how subjects do not function as atomized moral agents, but rather,
have deep and multiple connections with others; central to Gilligan’s moral theory is the
fundamental relation between the provider and the receiver of care. 206 Further indicating
the social basis of her theory, Gilligan suggests that the solution to a moral dilemma is
one that both relies not upon obedience to abstract laws, but “on a process of
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communication, assuming connection and believing that [one’s] voice will be heard”
(29), and which focuses on the feelings and personal responses of others in order to
achieve a resolution that best affects all individuals involved. Conversely, Gilligan’s care
ethic theory proposes that harm and a collapsing of moral action occurs when there is “a
failure of response” (38) and individuals neglect to help others when they are capable of
doing so, ultimately resulting in the breakdown of mutual responsibilities and the
cohesion of a community.
society, Gilligan’s ethical model takes a revisionary look at how moral situations should
the “moral problem arises from conflicting responsibilities rather than from competing
rights,” its resolution lies in “a mode of thinking that is contextual and narrative rather
than formal and abstract” (19). As such, care ethics proposes that moral considerations
must take into account personal relations, power imbalances, and situational
(104), thereby indicating how attention to contextual detail and interpersonal dynamics
assists in offering a more complete understanding of the variety of forces and influences
acting upon an individual at any given time, and further suggesting that an objective and
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constantly shifting as new information and details about an event come to light. Through
this emphasis on context and subjectivity, truth is revealed as a construct which can only,
back in [focus] now,” but that “Unfortunately most people still aren’t too equipped to
think ethically” (“Just Looking” 123), Atwood, in her myth-based mini-fictions in The
Tent, offers an opportunity for readers to exercise ethical modes of thought without
necessarily providing readers with definitive moral answers. Aligning with Herb Wylie’s
observation that “literature can cultivate ethical engagement without positioning itself in
the role of ‘moral ideology for the modern age’” (825), and that “the ethical utility of
literary texts may well reside most of all in their lack of amenability to clear judgment …
exploration of ethics that finds value in the process of ethical reasoning, rather than in the
images, in order to ram home some … worthy message” (Negotiating 102), Atwood
depicts a range of female brutalities that evoke ethical responses from both her characters
and her readers. 207 Varying from petty psychological harms to abominable acts of
infanticide, the female violence that Atwood represents becomes increasingly destructive
nothing” gesture, rather than a spectrum of harmful behaviors, and the necessity of
***
191
Providing a further revision to the Homeric epics, “It’s Not Easy Being Half
Divine” retells and updates the story of Helen of Troy through the perspective of an
unnamed and elusive first-person narrator who was a childhood friend of Helen and who
has since continued to foster her resentment towards her for her past and present
behaviors. Within the small space provided by Atwood’s mini-fiction narrative, Helen
matures from an aggressive and self-admiring young girl selling Kool-Aid off her front
porch to a troubled teen seeking escape from her degenerate family and finally into a
young woman who marries, and consequently becomes unfaithful to, the local police
chief, indicating how Atwood is taking on expansive and loaded issues. The central acts
of harm in “It’s Not Easy” are launched by Helen, who, as a child, reflects the hurtfulness
and psychological cruelty of Helen in The Penelopiad in refusing to allow the then young
forcefully claiming this privilege for herself and leaving the narrator years later to
indignantly recall how Helen “always had to be the one to carry the glass down the steps,
eyelids lowered and with that pink bow in her hair” (my emphasis 47). More precisely,
the narrator’s hurt stems not from her inability to entertain customers per se, but from her
repeated exclusion from aspects of Helen’s play, calling to mind the cruel girlhood games
Stack of Plates,” and Lady Oracle, in which Joan recalls such “game[s] very well” and is
“astonished at how much [she] still resent[s]” (230) such harms. Reflecting Iris Chase’s
observation in The Blind Assassin that “Women have curious ways of hurting someone
else … they do it so the [individual] doesn’t even know [she/he has] been hurt until much
later” (276), the narrator is only in retrospect able to understand the “pain” (47) and
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cruelty enacted through Helen’s gesture and to connect it with the larger and more
In conjunction with her continuing affair with “some man from the city who was
passing through” (48), Helen’s flaunting of her infidelity before her “hurt” (49) husband
and her disparaging public remarks about him evince her continuing acts of cruelty and
harm as a grown woman. By the end, Helen’s renowned act of indirect violence in
causing the Trojan War is gestured towards in the narrator’s observation that a violent
altercation between the police chief’s “big family” (49) and Helen’s new lover is
pending. Yet the repeated description of Helen as a fisherwoman suggest that her public
disgracing of the chief and her efforts to brandish her present happiness are acts which
are intended to lure the chief into action, thus yoking together what initially appear as
isolated acts of violence. The closing of the narrative imparts to the reader that several
characters are on the verge of a major battle to be fought over, and because of, Helen,
therein leaving the reader to examine the illusion sustained in Homer that men’s violence
is exclusively about blood-thirsty men and confirming Ellen O’Gorman’s suggestion that
the figure of Helen prompts us to scrutinize “the margins of war, margins inhabited by
women” (200). Yet in many ways, the brevity of Atwood’s mini-fiction requires readers
to look beyond the narrative in order to gain a broader understanding of the text;
Reingard Nischik similarly finds that the “highly intertextual nature” of these narratives
“creates networks of meaning and significance despite their limited scope” (“Margaret
Atwood’s Short” 153). Thus, in turning to Homer in order to fill in and substantiate the
gaps left behind by Atwood’s narrative, the reader is left with the sense that the imminent
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violence of the police chief and his men is inevitable, and has, in some capacity, already
displaying her infidelity and resultant happiness after abruptly leaving the police chief are
Helen, the Helen represented here is situated within a contemporary society holding
modern legal systems, yet, significantly, such infrastructures are rejected in favor of a
vigilante and informal justice not unlike the early archaic justice systems used during the
eighth century B.C. 208 Helen’s police chief husband, presumably viewed as a figurehead
formal systems in order to pursue less official, yet similarly sequential and on some level
perhaps more gratifying, justice measures by planning to gather “a posse, go into the city,
smoke them out, beat the guy up, get her back, smack her around a bit” (48). The
inevitable violence such acts would incur is suggested by the narrator’s observation that
the chief’s men all have “muscles and tempers” and by her concluding prediction that
“things will get serious” (49), a prognosis which, on a metafictive level, insists on the
gravity of myths. Moreover, the violence that Helen will be exposed to during the chief’s
attack both appears as an unexpected outcome resulting from her act of indirect violence
and suggests how, particularly in such instances of secondary harm, divisions between
In claiming his desire “to stand for the right values” (49), the police chief
those who believe they are taking moral action that are most violent in battle—and his
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subjective definition of the “right” defended through his justice behaviors. Marilyn
justice morality when she states that the traditionally “‘male,” moral voice … derives
moral judgments about particular cases from abstract, universalized moral rules and
principles” (92). Moreover, the chief’s pursuit of justice and his planning of an attack
upon Helen and her lover signal the loss of a sense of proportionality that typically occurs
during periods of social instability and the tendency of traditional justice structures to
enact what David Cayley views as a “compounding of old violence with new violence”
(11). Drawing on the ideas of Roy Porter, Sarah Sceats similarly argues that “western
society has traditionally taken a punitive attitude towards the body, being ever ready to
mortify or torment the flesh, particularly in the name of religion or justice” (61).
variously signaled in Atwood’s text by the female narrator who, despite the harms she
sustained by Helen and her desire to see Helen brought to justice, displays towards her a
degree of sympathy central to care ethic responses. The proportionately large number of
lines dedicated to Helen’s various justifications for her actions is significant, especially in
light of the constricted space of the narrative. In particular, Helen’s defense of her
the narrator, given her own pursuit of completion and closure in finally redressing wrongs
done to her, enabling her to understand how female violence can be a self-preservative
that women’s harmful transgressions enact “an articulation in a social order where she
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she is not allowed her own voice or original words” (my emphasis 63). When considered
in relation to Atwood’s story, Friedman’s observations reveal how acts can approximate
voice, and how proof of Helen’s subjectivity is demonstrated through her violent rather
than verbal gestures, the latter of which have been traditionally denied to her.
successful, would ultimately result in bringing Helen down to a fully human level and
rejoining her with a human community that she has becoming increasingly detached from
on account of her ostensibly divine birth, 209 delinquent upbringing and recent infamy—
her efforts to contextualize Helen’s present behaviors and identity, rather than viewing
them as isolated phenomena, further reflects her orientation towards an ethic of care. The
Helen’s behavior should not be mistaken for her pursuit of moral relativity, which
suggests that morality is simply a social construction that, like society, shifts with
changes in time and place. Marilyn Friedman, in aiming to clarify this distinction,
suggests that “sensitivity to contextual detail need not carry with it the relativistic view
that there simply are no moral rights and wrongs,” but rather “need only reflect
uncertainties about just which principles to apply to a particular case, or a concern that
one does not yet have sufficient knowledge to apply one’s principles” (114-5). Despite
the hurt she endured, and seemingly continues to endure, on account of the cruelties
enacted by Helen, the narrator’s detailed account of the dubious occupation of Helen’s
single mother, and the “goings-on at night” (48) in Helen’s childhood home, suggesting
Helen’s mother’s involvement in the sex trade, provides contextual details which help to
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explain Helen’s previous hurtful behaviors towards the narrator. In excluding the narrator
from certain aspects of her play, and in insisting upon her exclusive rights to solicit the
attention of their Kool-Aid customers, Helen mimes the behaviors of her mother,
presumably servicing the same clientele that visits her mother in the after-hours. Beyond
learning the multivalent use of the home as simultaneously a place of work, rest, and
play, Helen, through her unavoidable observations of her mother’s work, has learned the
commodity. The additional references to the perpetual absence of Helen’s father, and to
the early absconding of Helen’s two brothers, further function to contextualize Helen’s
unsuccessful relationships with men such as the police chief, and reveal the narrator’s
understanding, on some level, of what Marilyn Friedman insists is the “role of situational
Yet the principles and central tenets of an ethics of care are challenged and
particular, Gilligan’s essential assertion that “the self and the other are interdependent”
(74) and her understanding that a woman’s developing subjectivity is inseparable from,
and thus unavoidably influenced by, other individuals within her community, become
“inhospitable environment” offered in Atwood’s fiction “in which the female identity
must discover itself” (112). Through the title of her narrative alone, Atwood intimates
that not all communities offer an ethos of cohesion and support, and Atwood further
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depicts the community surrounding Helen, wherein her father is absent, her brothers have
run away, and her mother remains absorbed in her own affairs, as one where the only
consistencies are fragmentation and abandonment. Indeed, Helen herself continues this
pattern in leaving home early to marry young, and then deserting her commitments to the
police chief at the first opportunity, thus implying that community cannot be taken as a
given in all, or even most, circumstances. Gilligan herself acknowledges that “in order to
be able to care for another, one must first be able to care responsibly for oneself” (76),
suggesting the “primacy of … survival” (75) underlying her moral theory, yet,
suggest an inability to act morally? Furthermore, how does an ethics of care account for
the instantiating and enabling of violence because of one’s strong affiliation with a
community, as occurs in the case of the police chief and his men? In large part, Gilligan’s
care ethics fails to acknowledge how interpersonal relations often generate biases, and
can lead us to commit a wrong believing it is a good deed done on the behalf of those we
love, revealing how interpersonal relations are deeper and more complex than Gilligan’s
theory allows.
***
Similar to “It’s Not Easy,” “Salome Was a Dancer” is a myth-based narrative that
both examines how conventional and alternative ethical responses are variously
constructed following an event of female violence and exposes the gaps that singular
moral responses leave behind. Mary Louise Pratt’s well-known essay “The Short Story:
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The Long and the Short of It,” whose title is seemingly alluded to in the final lines of
“It’s Not Easy,” 210 examines the cultural hierarchy in which the novel is given greater
value relative to the short story and the reputation of the short story “as a training or
practice genre, for both apprentice writers and apprentice readers” (97). While Pratt is
here referring to the learning and practice of writing itself, this idea of the short story as a
“practice genre” is carried forward and adapted, rather than disputed, by Atwood in her
use of short fiction to provide readers with an arena within which to exercise and develop
morally-focused methods of reading, further shedding light on the ways in which Atwood
is re-investing short fiction with cultural value, and utilizing the short narrative form as
an experimental space for imagining alternative moral perspectives and their limitations.
In her contemporary re-vision of the biblical myth of Salome, 211 Atwood depicts Salome
as a young girl whose attempts to improve her Religious Studies grade by becoming
sexually involved with the teacher result in unwelcome repercussions after they are
caught in the stockroom together. The ensuing scandal leads to the public shaming and
societal death of the Religious Studies teacher, whom Salome accuses of sexual assault,
and the physical death of Salome, who leaves home to become an erotic dancer and is
soon after murdered in her dressing room. Further resonant of both the Old Testament
narrative of Judith and Holofernes, 212 and the film The Red Shoes, “Salome Was a
moral inquiry in response to acts of female violence that are often as debatable as they are
deadly.
Salome’s capacity for violence is evident in the false accusation of sexual assault
she levels at her Religious Studies teacher, a brutality that Atwood aligns with the
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biblical Salome’s orders for John the Baptist’s beheading, given its effect of causing the
teacher to forfeit his job and to “Los[e] his head completely” (“Salome” 53). However,
unlike the biblical Salome, who appears as a passive instrument of indirect violence that
enables her mother, Herodias, to achieve her murderous schemes, Atwood’s Salome is
portrayed as more directly accountable for the harm enacted. The narrator’s observation
that “you always knew with Salome that if anyone’s head was going to roll it wouldn’t be
hers” (53), suggests that Salome’s violence, like Helen’s, is rooted in her insistence on
Taken together, this twofold focus on the effect and motivation of violence suggests
Atwood’s recognition of the need to consider both the victim and the victimizer in
defining violence, and to recognize violence as both that which stems from malicious
intent and that which produces harm. 213 Radically revising and ironically participating in
the biblical account of Salome, in which Herodias embodies the mind capable of
imagining great violence and Salome remains unnamed as she performs the role of the
instrumental body conscripted to carry forth the violent command, together symbolizing
the traditional belief that the violent woman must necessarily hold a fractured identity,
Atwood’s revision of the myth insists on the importance of calling Salome into being by
employing her name as the first word of the narrative, and by conjoining the violent
female body with the violent female mind. In granting Salome a more complete
subjectivity than she is offered in biblical accounts, Atwood exemplifies her firm belief
that bad women in literature “should not mean, but be” (“The Curse” 222). 214
Yet despite the violence Salome ostensibly enacts in the narrative and her
200
her character. Similar to the multi-layered Tinker Bell costume the narrator recalls her
wearing in the school play, Salome is sheathed in layers of meaning that complicate
attempts to assign blame. 215 More specifically, although the narrator prefaces her account
by insisting on the intentionality and agency behind Salome’s decisions to manipulate the
Religious Studies teacher and to “[go] to work on the guy” (52), the stockroom incident,
in which “[Salome] had her shirt off” and “The teacher was growling away at her bra”
with the teacher and the teacher’s sexual assault of Salome. In short, the sexual violation
is clear, but the identities of the victim and victimizer remain uncertain. Additionally, the
discovery of Salome’s murdered body wearing “nothing … but her black leather
macramé bikini and that steel-studded choke collar” (54), which calls to mind both
Offred’s sighting of Moira at Jezebel’s wearing a strapless “black outfit … wired from
the inside, pushing up the breasts … a black bow tie around her neck” (The Handmaid’s
Tale 224) and the implied bodily violation of “young and pretty girls” (“Something Has
Happened” 131) elsewhere in The Tent, further reinforces suspicions of Salome’s sexual
situates Salome as a confounded figure of both violence and victimization, freedom and
constraint.
As such, attempts to use justice ethics to respond to the violence in the narrative
are staged for failure, since justice theories traditionally rely upon the existence of a
comprehensive truth and Atwood does not have one to offer. While the pursuit of truth
(or its approximation) is, of course, not the only aim of justice efforts, the belief in a
substantive truth of events has shaped the practices of judicial institutions, 216 and enabled
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a faith in their capacity to order and determine the past. 217 Framed in this way, the
conviction of the Religious Studies teacher for the charge of sexual assault can be
framework that aims to resolve ambiguity, rather than keep it intact. In “thr[owing] his
weight around” (53), Salome’s influential stepfather helps to ensure that such final
judgments of justice, irrespective of their potential fallibility, are made and made to stay,
reflecting Elaine’s observation in Cat’s Eye that retributory justice and the pursuit of “An
eye for an eye leads only to more blindness” (405). What is made clear, however, is that
within this growing web of blindness, one of the most detrimental oversights is that of the
judicature and its failure to recognize, or entertain the possibility of, women’s violence,
revealing what Patricia Pearson describes as the “collective amnesia” (156) and the
“remarkable denial that female predators exist” (157). Moreover, while justice theories
assume that the proper state of a society is reinstated and justice is served in the
punishment delivered by the court, Atwood exposes how legal sentences are silently
compounded and extended by various unauthorized social forces which work to sentence
the teacher to social isolation, homelessness and insanity long after his official sentence
evident in the opening lines of “Salome,” in which the narrator suggests an orientation
towards an ethics of care by focusing on the emotional impact of violence and proposing
that Salome’s exploitation of the teacher “was really mean of her” (51), an evaluation
made more prominent through its repetition verbatim a few lines later. While inveighing
against the teacher’s “droning on about morality and so forth” (51), the narrator’s early
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evaluation of Salome’s acts as “mean” draws the reader into a moral realm that
recommends the use of sympathy in responding to harmful acts and reflects what Marilyn
Friedman describes as the tendency of individuals following the principles of care ethics
to “seek the detail that makes the suffering clear” (93). Contrasting with the pursuit of
justice to ascertain the facts of reality “beyond a reasonable doubt,” the narrator of
“Salome” further defers truth and certainty, where the repetition of the conjunction “but”
in the opening paragraph, and the narrator’s use of conjunctive structures to see from
multiple perspectives the relationship between Salome and the teacher, reveals her
awareness that there will always be conflicting points of view and complicating factors
that render singular moral judgments problematic. For both the narrator and Gilligan, fair
limitations of any particular resolution and describ[ing] the conflicts that remain”
(Gilligan 22). Related to this understanding is the narrator’s growing recognition of the
constructed nature of her own narrative, signaled in her increasing use of uncertain
phrases such as “I guess” (51, 52), “your guess is as good as mine” (52), and “so the story
goes” (52-53). The narrator’s refusal to offer herself as arbiter of truth and her
recognition of the fallibility and situatedness of all knowers demonstrates her preference
for regarding truth as a function of context and individual perspective, rather than as a
“Salome,” the narrator seems further aware of how an ethics based on care and
responsibility is similarly open to critique and reassessment. While Gilligan idealizes care
as “an activity of relationship, of seeing and responding to need” (my emphasis 62),
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Atwood’s narrator recognizes the potential to subversively employ and offer care for
reflecting Kiss’s stance that the idealizations set forth by an ethics of care are at times
how Salome has seen, and is in turn responding to, the sexual needs of the teacher, who
“finger[s] the grapefruits in the supermarket in this creepy way” (51). Artificially
engaging in care and exploiting the needs of her teacher in order to improve her academic
standing, Salome demonstrates how “feminine virtues” are often “developed as strategies
(Hoagland 100).
herself, who, despite her role as moral evaluator, must also be evaluated for her behaviors
and her use of care in discriminatory and harmful ways. Conceptualizations of care have
been examined by Margaret McLaren as a way for women to achieve power within a
yet Atwood’s narrative exemplifies how care constructs can alternately be seen to
perpetuate women’s subordination. Although “Salome” reveals the inability of care ethics
to describe the moral perspectives of all, or even most, women and the damage caused by
the narrator sympathizes with and offers care to the male characters, yet does so at the
cost of excluding women from her sympathies. More specifically, the narrator’s subtle
acts of misogyny in coldly referring to Salome’s death as “too bad for Management”
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childhood beauty, contrast starkly with her palliative description of the teacher’s potential
molestation of Salome as an event “you have to laugh [at]” (53) and her commiserating
with the teacher after his being charged with sexual assault, leniently referring to him as a
“poor jerk” that “looks like Jesus” (53). 218 The narrator’s final statement, in which she
declares that “It was all the mother’s fault, if you ask me” (54), illustrates both the
narrator’s appeal to justice principles, which are inclined towards the objective placement
of blame, and her simultaneous alignment with care ethic principles through her focus on
the subjectivity of truth. The deferred narrative closure suggested by this tension between
moral systems illustrates that the moral imperatives typically contained within myths, 219
and what Armstrong identifies as their ability to “[put] us in the correct … posture for
right action” (4), are not as simple as they may initially seem.
***
demonstrate how moral discourses and myths are perpetually open to new evaluations,
and reveal that while Atwood may regard “fiction writing [a]s the guardian of the moral
and ethical sense of the community” (“An End” 346), the moral gate-keeper function
must allow interpretations both in and out. Atwood’s effort to intertwine both ethical and
“Nightingale,” where female violence appears in its most unsettling form and easy moral
responses are eschewed in favor of those which hold ethical ambivalences intact.
Revisiting and revising the myth of Philomel and Procne most famously recounted in
Ovid’s Metamorphoses, 220 “Nightingale” reverses the experiences of the two sisters to
tell how Philomel is visited one night by the tortured ghost of her sister Procne, recalling
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the description in Lady Oracle of Joan’s midnight visitations from her deceased mother,
who similarly suffered “life [as] her curse” (330). The purpose of Procne’s visit is to
remind Philomel of the horrors she endured as hostage of Tereus, whose name is never
mentioned, but whose identity as the husband of both women is clearly implied. Told
from the first-person perspective of Philomel, the narrative reveals Procne’s feelings of
betrayal over her sister’s knowledge of the violence enacted upon her, and her sister’s
The immensity of violence described in the narrative is achieved not only by the
participant in them. Beyond Tereus’s detainment of Procne in an isolated shack and his
mutilation of her body in cutting out her tongue, Philomel’s refusal to respond to
Tereus’s violence as such, and her ultimately unconvincing denial of Procne’s mutilation
as “a lie” used to cover Procne’s “decision not to speak” (136), challenge conventional
engendered through inaction. Reflecting Hoagland’s assertion that “turning the other
cheek is an act of violence” (107), Linda Bell finds that “inaction generally is tantamount
to action” and suggests the danger in “Conflating inaction with not acting and thereby
placing it beyond the purview of ethics” (34), where in doing so we overlook how not
acting to end or divert violence “affirms its acceptability and makes one an accomplice of
a sort” (37). 221 Similar to the actions of the character in “The Tent,” who is only
identified through the second person pronoun “you,” and who crouches inside the tent to
deny the existence of “people … howling” (The Tent 143) outside, the violence Philomel
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enacts in choosing not to act exemplifies how female violence is committed in a variety
of interactions that do not necessarily involve direct physical exchanges, yet at times do.
directly inflicts agony and death on the body of her victim, in this case her son, 222 and in
doing so undermines cultural beliefs which maintain that women who commit violence
admission of her brutality in holding out her bloodied hands to Philomel is disarming,
given the magnitude of horror implied when Procne confesses, “Our son … I couldn’t
stop myself” (137). The monstrosity of this violent act is again instated in the story’s
closing through the unnamed witness figure, identified in the concluding paragraph as the
“man standing underneath [the] tree,” who is rendered nearly speechless and with the
ability to produce but one word: “Grief” (138). Removed from the world of sacrifice, in
which the pain and suffering of death promises redemptive and often rejuvenatory ends,
the violence Procne enacts is largely self-appeasing and responds to her own repression
and victimization, recalling the female poet in Atwood’s short story “Lives of the Poets”
whose prolonged oppression and accumulating rage lead her to imagine that “she will
open her mouth and the room will explode in blood” (Dancing 209).
Yet the acts of violence represented in Atwood’s narrative are never simply acts
of violence. Rather, they exist as multivalent gestures that refuse singular meaning or
easy moral evaluation. Similar to the police chief in “It’s Not Easy,” who by the end is
planning a violent attack upon Helen and her lover that will uphold “right values” (49),
Procne’s murder of her son simultaneously performs acts of retribution and informal
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justice against her husband. However, Procne’s violent actions, like those of the chief,
additionally signal the potential of violent means, even those intended to restore order
and “right,” to exceed the ends they aim to achieve. Hannah Arendt’s assertion that the
real threat of politically motivated violence is that “the end is in danger of being
overwhelmed by the means which it justifies and which are needed to reach it” (4),
illustrates how the pursuit of justice in Atwood’s narrative, and Procne’s horrific use of
her son as a means to an end, result in an erasure of the original judicially-oriented goals.
Procne’s reference to her violent acts as “mistakes” and her claiming of a personal loss in
identifying her victim as “Our son” (my emphasis 137), exemplify the dangers inherent in
conflating justice and violence and the potential of justice acts to become mutually
devastating.
While less ambiguous than the violence found in Atwood’s other mini-fictions,
the brutality described in “Nightingale” similarly functions to evoke diverse and shifting
ethical responses which reveal the difficulty inherent in thinking ethically. Moreover,
Atwood’s refusal to align with a single ideology or orthodox moral perspective does not
imply her rejection of moral ideologies in their entirety, but rather, her understanding of
the need to use constructed moralities with an awareness of the biases of any ideological
system; in an interview with Linda Sandler, Atwood admits her caution in using theories
given her recognition of “their limits,” yet further states that, despite this, “theories are
useful for teaching” (52). 223 Appearing as a palimpsest of moral stances, “Nightingale”
layers justice responses with care ethic approaches, where the latter is in many ways most
and Procne suggests her recognition of the value of viewing others empathetically, and of
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projecting ourselves in order to see the world from another’s point of view and through
strategies. 224 In falling short of this ideal and demonstrating the tension between form
escape her torture—an event which Procne, in stating, “You knew … You repressed it,
but you must have known” (135), insists Philomel was aware of—signals how adopting
empathetic perspectives and acting morally through care often propose a difficult
challenge. Further, Philomel’s turning a blind eye to her sister’s torments indicates how,
within an ethics of care, immoral acts occur following “a failure of response” (Gilligan
38) and when one is unwilling to help others when one has had the opportunity to do so.
accusatory conversation that unfolds between Philomel and Procne, and the
Within the worlds of both myth and reality, however, there of course arise
conflicts to which there are no simple solutions or easy moral evaluations. Care ethic
theories acknowledge that, in some situations, harm will inevitably be enacted and that
“When no option exists that can be construed as being in the best interest of everybody,
when responsibilities conflict and decision entails the sacrifice of somebody’s needs, then
the woman confronts the seemingly impossible task of choosing the victim” (Gilligan
theories, Gilligan’s assertion suggests the need for care ethicians to hold a meta-
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awareness of the limits of any moral system of thought, and of the possibility of
others in general come into conflict. Central to such an awareness is the acknowledgment
that an unambiguously “good” solution is not always attainable. Framed in this way,
Philomel’s failure to help Procne, while potentially viewed as an immoral act within an
ethics of care, can also be regarded as an impossible moral dilemma that will unavoidably
husband and implicitly vindicating her failure to attempt the rescue of Procne, Philomel
proclaims: “I had to ... I had to get married. He raped me. What else could I have done?”
(136). Here, Philomel’s protestations reveal how her obligations to defend her sister’s
marriage and safety are incompatible with her obligations to herself, and to her own
sanity and security. Philomel’s decision to pursue her own needs over those of her sister,
while perhaps initially appearing as narcissistic, was by no means easy; her consequent
apology to Procne and her admission that “None of us behaved very well” (136) reveals
Philomel’s recognition of the harm resultant from her actions. Tereus’s rape of Philomel,
a violence Procne intimates was also enacted upon her, complicates Philomel’s moral
agency in choosing Tereus over Procne as an act of both assertion and fearful response.
The paradox underlying Philomel’s decision to marry Tereus is that her effort to preserve
Instantiating Armstrong’s observation that the “most powerful myths are about
extremity; they force us to go beyond our experience” (3), “Nightingale” delivers readers
into a world in which they are faced with the problem of how to proceed in response to
female violence when both traditional and alternative systems of morality are exposed as
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inadequate to the dilemmas posed. Despite the early presence of structured and logical
describes the customary spaces of ghostly visitations by stating that, “If a room, there’s
often a window; if a window, there will be curtains ... Never venetian blinds” (my
emphasis 133), the narrative quickly enters into complex moral situations which exceed
basic logical formulas and which require the postponement of singular moral judgment.
Reflecting her use of myths as windows into ethical modes of thinking, rather than as
receptacles holding moral answers, Atwood, in a recent review, explains that, with some
narratives, “you don’t ask How will it all turn out? since that isn’t the point” (“In the
Heart” 58). Philomel’s closing description of her narrative as “the story of the story of the
story” (138) indicates the multiple revisions at work in “Nightingale,” which include the
re-imagining of myth, gender, and short fiction traditions that Atwood knows will be
themselves subject to later re-writings, given that every writer is part of a “community of
storytellers that stretches back through time” (“Nine Beginnings” 108) as well as into the
future. 225 Yet Philomel’s suggestion of palimpsestic revision perhaps most importantly
points to the new renderings of alternative and conventional ethics offered through the
text, and demonstrates how all constructed narratives, including those of ethics, are
More broadly, Atwood, in engaging with and revealing the limits of both
conventional male justice and alternative female moral discourses, permits her myth-
based fiction in The Penelopiad and The Tent to occupy multiple moral positions
simultaneously and prevents her writing from appearing polemical and thus speaking to,
rather than with, the reader on the topic of female violence. By soliciting an engagement
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with moral discourses, Atwood’s narratives encourage a questioning of who constructs
ethical systems and upon what principles, and even invite the interrogation of ethics itself
as a way in which “thinking, feeling, and acting are normativized, censored and
between official and unofficial moral systems ties seemingly disparate moral processes
together, suggesting both the need to look within and beyond moral paradigms in seeking
separate moral approaches into mutually exclusive and independent realms. The resultant
effect is not moral disorder, but a moral integration in which ethical tensions are held
intact and autonomous moral perspectives are refused on account of the large gaps and
inconsistencies they leave behind. What Atwood espouses is not the relinquishing of
moral ideologies tout court, but an abandonment of the uncritical use of established moral
systems. Extending the New Critic’s understanding of the literary short story as a form
Atwood’s mini-fiction offers tentativeness and hesitancy as the very material of narrative
closure, where the failure to apply a singular moral system is simultaneously the greatest
success in allowing the text to reveal the inherent limitations of isolated moral
laments that when women are forced to behave according to the dictates of gender
convention, they “are deprived of moral choice.” Yet Atwood’s recent myth fictions
reveal her growing awareness that broadened moral choice does not necessarily imply an
answer to the question of women’s place within structures of morality. Likewise, the
development of narrative justice and women’s care ethics orientations does not mean that
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women should rest assured and cease to pursue new moral understandings. While the
reader may seek definitive ethical answers that enable a moral response to the evocative
and difficult issue of female violence, Atwood, as might be expected, has none to offer.
Notes
184
For an elaboration of this point, see Sharon R. Wilson’s “Mythological Intertexts in
Margaret Atwood’s Works.”
185
In a recent interview with Ian Brown, Atwood identifies the short fictional works
contained in The Tent as “mini-fictions,” providing some resolution to critical debates
that have variously identified Atwood’s short works as “the Baudelairean prose poem”
(Nischik “Murder” 6) or as “short-short, sudden, or flash fiction” (Wilson “Fiction” 18).
186
While Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey mutually describe the Trojan War, which scholars
estimate took place in the 13th or 12th century BC during the Mycenaean era, it is widely
accepted that Homer composed his epic poems centuries later during a period falling
between 750-700 BC. Additionally, while the events of the Odyssey historically took
place during a different historical era, the historical environment of the poem is that of
Homer’s own day, thus suggesting that Penelope’s retrospective narrative in The
Penelopiad reflects the archaic, rather than Mycenaean, period.
187
See Odyssey 21. 311-343, where Penelope insists upon the equal opportunity of all her
suitors in the bow challenge she proposes.
188
In addition to Penelope, the ability of Arete, queen of Skheria, to settle men’s disputes
in the Odyssey (7.71-73) suggests that women’s capacities for justice and fair judgment
were not entirely uncommon during the archaic period and that, despite the traditional
associations of justice with the masculine realm, women were accepted and at times
honored for their judicious abilities (Odyssey 7.66-70).
189
Lillian Eileen Doherty confirms that, in the Homeric tradition, “neither Helen nor the
Sirens are punished … for their alleged treachery” (87), a reality that Elisabeth Meier
Tetlow explains in part by pointing to the fact that “the kingship of Menelaos [Helen’s
husband] was matrilineal and matrilocal. Helen was the daughter and heir of the former
king of Sparta. Menelaos became king of Sparta through his marriage to Helen. If he lost
her completely, he would also lose his throne. After the war, Menelaos could not put
Helen to death for the same reason” (15).
190
Penelope’s claim here is one previously supported in the Odyssey by Helen, who
appears to lament “the blindness which Aphrodite sent me when she brought me to Troy
from my own dear country and made me forsake my daughter, my bridal chamber, and a
husband” (4.261-264).
191
Despite her indirect acts of violence, Helen’s repeated use of the adverb “because” in
the aforementioned examples insists on the direct and causal relationship between her
actions and the resultant destruction.
192
Beyond their surface similarities, Atwood’s humanization of Circe is intended to
encourage reader’s sympathy for her, while Penelope’s efforts to prove Helen’s human
ancestry are intended to establish her culpability, and to place her within the reach of
213
human justice. For an elaboration on Circe’s transformation, see Sherrill Grace’s Violent
Duality (71).
193
While Helen’s words are undoubtedly damaging, Helen’s attempt to suggest contrast
here is, to a certain extent, a failure, since Penelope refuses Helen’s claims to divine
lineage, and Zeus, like Icarus of Sparta, was similarly capable of inglorious violence
towards women, as demonstrated by his rape of Leda.
194
While Penelope operates as moral agent in the Odyssey, Atwood draws attention to,
and Penelope herself acknowledges, the fact that such a role was always complicated and
frequently underwritten by Penelope’s simultaneous functioning as a moral object whose
modesty and “edifying legend” were used in a figurative manner as a “stick … to beat
other women with” (2). For Atwood’s further discussion on this matter, see her essay
“Spotty-Handed Villainesses” (168).
195
Atwood confirms Cooke’s observations while offering a catalogue of her diverse
motivations for writing, in which she reveals her similarity to Penelope and Iris by
admitting that narration allows her to “satisfy [her] desire for revenge” and to create
identities “that [will] survive death” (Negotiating xx, xxii).
196
Penelope’s mother’s advice closely resembles the counsel Reenie offers Iris in The
Blind Assassin, in which she asserts that, “there’s always more than one way to skin a cat
… If you can’t go through, go around” (501).
197
Additionally, Linda Lee Clader contends that representations of Helen prior to
Homer’s epics in cult and religious contexts identified her as a divine nature goddess who
was “closely connected with fertility, with the power of growth” (71), an identity which
Gregory Nagy maintains became “vulnerable … once it g[ot] exposed to narrative
traditions belonging to Hellenic cultures” (xii). Clader’s and Nagy’s suggestion of the
mutation Helen’s early identity underwent in the face of cultural shifts, when considered
alongside the post-Homeric changes in Helen’s image noted by Suzuki, indicates that
Helen’s representation has been variously altered throughout history and that Atwood is
participant in, and continuing, a historic trend of Helen’s shifting cultural identity.
198
In her interview with Aritha van Herk, Atwood candidly states that both Penelope and
Odysseus “are famously proficient liars” (“A Practical”), adding that her re-writing of the
Odyssey was, in part, an opportunity to investigate this aspect of their personalities.
199
See Negotiating with the Dead (48).
200
In “Circe/Mud Poems,” Atwood similarly depicts Penelope as guilty of extramarital
relations in her description of how, during Odysseus’s absence, Penelope’s after dinner
conversations are accompanied by “tea and sex / dispensed graciously both at once” (65).
201
For example, Atwood, in a short exposé describing her writing of The Penelopiad,
states that she was inspired to revise Homer’s myth because “the hanging of the 12
‘maids’—slaves, really—at the end of The Odyssey seemed to me unfair at first reading,
and seems so still” (“The Myths Series and Me”).
202
Sarah Hoagland suggests that “Regardless of whether we take the euphemistic
description of justice as fairness or the blatant assessment of justice as the right to cruelty
… justice ultimately is tied to punishment” (262), and René Girard similarly argues that
“principles of justice … are in no real conflict with the concept of revenge” (16).
214
203
For an example of how Atwood aligns with Hoagland’s observation that individuals
seek moral rules and precepts as a means of security, see Atwood’s interview with Alan
Twigg.
204
Similarly, justice ethics are not wholly opposed to an ethics of care, and at times
appear to incorporate such moral perspectives. For example, André du Toit and Albie
Sachs maintain that forms of “restorative justice” view the offender in a community
context, and are “concerned not so much with punishment as with correcting imbalances,
restoring broken relationships—with healing, harmony and reconciliation” (qtd. in Kiss,
“Moral Ambition” 69). Likewise, proponents of rehabilitation through criminal
punishment argue that unlawful individuals are a “symptom of a social disease” and thus,
that “society ought to provide [their] treatment” (Banks 116). However, despite these
intersections between justice and care based morality, theorists such as Michel Foucault
have remained skeptical of ostensibly humanitarian approaches to justice that, in the past,
have not aimed “to punish less, but to punish better … to insert the power to punish more
deeply into the social body” (82).
205
Gilligan adds that “Once obligation extends to include the self as well as others, the
disparity between selfishness and responsibility dissolves” (94).
206
Attempting to exemplify how not all moral approaches are created equal within a
patriarchal society, and to show that varying social values typically become linked with
different moral approaches, Gilligan points out that women’s deference to others “is
rooted not only in their social subordination but also in the substance of their moral
concern. Sensitivity to the needs of others and the assumption of responsibility for taking
care lead women to attend to voices other than their own,” thus revealing how women’s
“moral weakness” is “inseparable from [their] moral strength” (16).
207
The disparate forms of female violence that Atwood explores in her mini-fiction
instantiate Laura Robinson’s observation that Atwood is “committed to questioning the
use and abuse of power on a variety of levels” (151).
208
For an example of this vigilante and community based mode of justice in Homer’s
Odyssey, see 24. 411-471.
209
The inherent separation of divine figures from their surrounding community is
similarly suggested by the self-proclaimed god conversing with the female speaker in
“Bottle,” who, while utterly unconvincing in other respects, is certainly correct in
suggesting that divine, or soon-to-be divine figures, are “not like everyone else” (9).
210
Responding to the cultural hierarchy that increasingly differentiates Helen from the
police chief, and, on a metatextual level, to the cultural valuation of longer narratives
over shorter ones, the narrator states, “The long and short of it is, pardon my pun, nobody
likes to be laughed at” (49).
211
See Mark 6:15-29, Matthew 14:1-12, Luke 3:19-20. The biblical accounts of Salome
depict her as a young girl who, after dancing for her stepfather Herod Antipas at his
banquet, was granted one request from him. Salome’s mother, Herodias, prompts Salome
to request the head of Saint John the Baptist in order to enact revenge upon him for his
condemning as incestuous her second marriage to the brother of her first husband.
Salome, obliging her mother, puts this request before her father, and Saint John is soon
beheaded and his head brought to Salome upon a dish.
215
212
For the Old Testament story of Judith and her beheading of Holofernes, see Judith 10-
13.
213
Traditionally, definitions of violence extend from the motivations and behaviors of the
violent agent; however, this conception of violence excludes the often manifold effects of
violence on the victim and ultimately privileges the victimizer over the targeted
individual who has been most intimately exposed to the consequences of brutality. In
acknowledging the need to consider both the victimizer as well as the victim when
defining violence, Atwood emphasizes how violence has both causes and profound
effects, and insists that violent women “pose the question of responsibility, because …
actions produce consequences” (“Spotty-Handed” 168-9). Also see Hanmer and Saunders
(30).
214
Atwood is here borrowing from modernist poet Archibald MacLeish’s famous
statement about poetry in order to emphasize the necessity for literature to represent
women as subjects, rather than objects.
215
While Atwood elsewhere highlights the need to lay blame and to hold others
accountable for their actions, in “Salome Was a Dancer” she accedes that this ideal is not
always possible, and that this fact can be as unsettling as the harms themselves.
216
For example, the swearing in of witnesses, and the reliance on confessions, various
forms of evidence, and expert testimony. Also see Banks (86, 88).
217
For a further discussion of the relationship between justice and truth, see Hans
Crombag’s “Adversarial or Inquisitorial” (23-4), Philip Smith and Kristin Natalier’s
Understanding Criminal Justice (32) and Kevin Glynn’s discussion of “Cops, Courts,
and Criminal Justice” in Tabloid Culture (57).
218
The narrator’s reference to the teacher as appearing similar to Jesus further suggests
her attempts to canonize the teacher by linking him to his biblical counterpart, Saint John
the Baptist, who, in the biblical account of the Salome, was Jesus’s cousin and thus might
have held a familial resemblance to Him.
219
Despite the extensive emendations to Classical and Biblical myths that Atwood’s
narratives offer, her mini-fictions retain their status as myth, and even epitomize
Atwood’s understanding of myth as connected to deeply unsettling processes of revision.
Unlike Northrop Frye, who regards myth as the most “conventionalized of all literary
modes” (Anatomy 134), Atwood conceives of myth as a starting point for the re-
configuration of archetypal figures and plots and, in the words of Klaus Peter Müller,
“supports only those myths that claim no absolutes” (248).
220
See Metamorphoses, 6:424-674.
221
In discussing Atwood’s early poetry, Grace similarly finds that “passive acquiescence
does not absolve guilt or remove responsibility” (Violent 3) and Atwood herself, in a
more recent publication, confirms her belief that failing to act as “your brother’s keeper”
can result in “blood on your hands and a mark on your forehead” (Negotiating 102). Also
see Atwood’s interview with Graeme Gibson (15).
222
In Ovid’s version of the myth, Procne, upon learning of Tereus’s torture and
incarceration of her sister Philomel, decides to kill her son Itys that she conceived
through Tereus and to secretly serve her butchered son to Tereus for dinner. In order to
reveal to Tereus the contents of his meal, Philomel brings the severed head of Itys out to
Tereus on a platter.
216
223
Wylie similarly finds that “Ethical criticism … presumes reading not as a matter of
passive consumption but as an intersubjective transaction” (830) between the text and the
reader.
224
More broadly, such transpositions instantiate what Atwood views as the “redeeming
social value” of reading and writing literature, given its capacity to “force [us] to imagine
what it’s like to be someone else” (“Writing the Male” 430).
225
For example, “Nightingale” offers Atwood’s own adaptation of earlier Greek re-
writings of the myth in which the experiences of Philomel and Procne are similarly
inverted. This earlier revision appears in Eustathius of Thessalonica’s Greek version of
the myth, contained in his collected commentaries on Homer’s Odyssey. Regrettably,
Eustathius’s commentaries on Homer’s epic poem are not yet translated into English.
217
Chapter 5
In demonstrating how violent women can “act as keys to doors we need to open,
and as mirrors in which we can see more than just a pretty face,” Margaret Atwood
highlights how traditionally marginal and nonliterary figures can perform central and
necessary roles by exploring the many “forbidden room[s]” (“Spotty-Handed” 168, 171)
that lie beyond the convincing veneers of social life. Emerging from this broad
observation, this study has offered detailed readings of five novels and six works of
Atwood’s fiction, and the need to re-evaluate the perfunctory and peripheral role harmful
women have played in previous criticism. Each chapter was motivated by a desire to
create a substantive critical context and vocabulary to discuss female brutality and to
expand upon the fundamental axioms that underlie this project. The first of these
contends that Atwood situates violence as a deeply human behavior by erasing the
aberrancy associated with harm and by articulating the logic of motivations behind
brutality. To this end, Atwood insists on the connection between violence and the human
condition, where “Anything is the sort of thing anyone would do, given the right
circumstances” (Lady Oracle 179), and creates the conditions for reflexivity in which
readers are forced to recognize their implication in violence. The second principle
maintains that Atwood gainfully employs the violent woman as a means of social
discourses, including feminism, national identity, the en-gendering of the artist, and
justice ethics, can be re-imagined in productive ways. To the extent that the politics
217
behind Atwood’s writing are those of emendation, and art, for Atwood, “has a habit of
exploring the shadow side, the unspoken, the unthought” (“If You Can’t” 21), her
and how the order they promise is a qualified one at best. More precisely, Atwood’s
given that it defends the utility of broader socio-cultural ideologies, yet renders unstable
the specific ways in which such ideologies have been articulated. At stake in such re-
visions is the freedom to imagine and live within one’s conditions alternately, and to
discern the value of re-negotiating discourses that are a priori assumed non-negotiable.
The theoretical framing for this study extends from the dispersed critical attempts
to expand the conceptual horizon of women’s brutality, and thus dually situates violence
as a variable gesture and a complex social construct. Elaborating on the former, I have
sought to contextualize women’s violence as a variety of behaviors that expose the biases
of visuality in determining violence and Atwood’s understanding that “Fists have many
understandings of harm and draws on the deeply-rooted connotations of the term violence
to express the gravity and destructiveness of non-physical and self-inflicted attacks. Such
efforts to broaden traditional understandings aim to account for the diverse ways in which
women express their agency and interpret vulnerability, and thus, to reconsider and
by ambivalence, this study argues for what René Girard terms the dual or “two-in-one
218
simultaneously generative and destructive potential of violence and in the positioning of
the violent woman as a figure who complicates the relationship between the margins and
the center. Notwithstanding her outsider status, the violent woman consistently addresses
discourses central to her community and is situated in the fore of social, cultural, and
political change, thereby indicating that while individuals may be created and conditioned
by discursive practices, they are further able to challenge and rewrite these traditions.
Foremost amongst the discursive formations unsettled by the violent woman are
feminist frameworks, which have hitherto neglected to create a conceptual space for what
feminist paradigms that espouse women’s sororial connections and assume women’s
victimhood and anti-violence stance, the violent women appears a non sequitur, leaving
Atwood to question how one might “depict the scurvy behaviour often practised by
women against one another,” or “the Seven Deadly Sins in their female versions …
without being considered antifeminist” (“Spotty-Handed” 166). This study does not
intend to attack feminist platforms, or void the significant advances feminist critics have
made in recalibrating certain behaviors, such as political protest and the decision to not
wed and/or bear children, that were previously condemned in women or deemed to be of
poor taste. Rather, it aims to expose the further challenge posed by the violent woman
within discursive spaces that privilege certain female behaviors over others, and to
highlight the need for feminist discussions to sympathize with and address the full range
of women’s conduct. In other words, feminist conversations would stand to benefit from
permitting women their imperfections as a mark of their humanity, and a sign of their
freedom to falter.
219
Localizing the disruptive potential of the violent woman within the mythological
spaces of the nation, the critical discussion of Surfacing and selected short stories from
Highlighting the biases that underlie Canadians’ self-conception, the violent woman
reveals the disreputable cultural practices and lamentable realities that are obscured by
laudatory national metanarratives, and thus the danger of perpetuating national identity as
generalization” (Atwood “Eleven Years” 93), and a way of thinking that consistently
overlooks certain ways of acting, insists on the need to keep open to re-evaluation the
ways in which Canadians imagine themselves, and prompts Canadians to confront, and
take responsibility for, the full range of their national identity. As a harbinger
proclaiming the importance of such admissions, the violent woman unsettles and
Shifting focus to the female artist and the Red Shoes Syndrome that Atwood at
times feared had become for creative women “almost de rigueur” (“Ground Works” 259),
it becomes apparent that the violent woman similarly appears in Atwood’s artist fictions
as a disruptive figure. In Lady Oracle, Cat’s Eye, and The Blind Assassin, the harmful
woman emerges as a re-visionary who overcomes her impulses towards self-harm and
thus re-evaluates the deadly trajectory promised to creative women. Adopting strategies
female and artist roles, Atwood’s artists defy the societal biases against female creativity
220
that aim to enjoin women’s engagement with their world. Such attempts at survival in
one regard demonstrate the violent woman’s will to power and her recognition of the
pliability of social narratives, yet in another indicate her growing awareness that
projective defenses are not a solution to the problems of the female artist, but a means of
prolonging their difficulties, and of compounding them with the haunting of projected or
forgotten others. As such, the variable limitations such women encounter in using
projective mechanisms, and their continued difficulties in pursuing their artistry, indicate
how women’s creativity is often endured despite the conditions and threats to the self that
accounts for the disruption she poses within justice ethics. Both The Penelopiad and the
myth-based narratives of The Tent re-draft mythic plots in order to highlight the various
brutalities committed by legendary women, which range from petty harms to atrocious
acts of infanticide, and the alternative moral frames called upon to redress and discuss
such harms. Drawing on the pre-existent ethical quality of myths, Atwood’s revised
narratives refuse the reduction of social complexity to moral simplicity and range beyond
“sentencing” and care ethics responses. Through such efforts, Atwood’s belief that
morality must remain conversant with all types of interpersonal interaction becomes
apparent alongside her sense that ethics is best conceptualized as an ongoing and adaptive
process. Moreover, the inadequacy of both traditional and alternative moral positions as
final solutions in Atwood’s myths suggests that this understanding of ethical engagement
221
as a continuing practice is necessary to encourage the critical and reflexive use of, rather
woman is beyond the aims of the present study to analyze the specific employment of
such women in revising social and cultural discourses. Nonetheless, brief mention might
be made of the more prominent examples of female violence within Atwood’s other
writing, and the meanings such women create within their individual texts. In Alias
Grace (1996), for example, Atwood looks back to nineteenth-century Canada to the
historical figure of Grace Marks, who is suspected of killing, or abetting the murder of,
her employer Thomas Kinnear and his mistress Nancy Montgomery. Yet Grace’s non-
disclosure concerning her relative guilt or innocence does not necessarily imply her
attempt to evade the truth, but rather, her early inability to discern it. Caught between the
Charybdis of others’ attempts to define her as a figure of otherness and the Scylla of not
knowing how to define herself, Grace draws attention to the uneasiness aroused by
dangerous women and indicates the potential for such women to become unfamiliar to
recognizing how good and evil co-exist within her, and “are located closer together than
most people think” (536). The Robber Bride (1993) similarly explores social
constructions of female otherness, and its range of meaning from the “other woman,” or
mistress, to the discomforting figure of the uncanny, the latter indicating Atwood’s
acknowledge their similarity to, rather than distance from, the violent female figure.
Subversively employing conventions of the Gothic Romance, The Robber Bride refuses
222
to sustain focus on an unassailable male hero, opting instead to center on the villainous
Zenia, who, prior to her untimely death, violently disrupts the lives of her three female
friends for three decades only to return from the dead in order to continue her torments.
Significantly, Zenia first appears as a mirror reflection the three women notice as they
dine at the Toxique restaurant, an event which signals their likeness to Zenia and which
foreshadows the various ways Zenia performs as an unsettling psychic double that
exposes the violent potentialities of her female friends. Not unlike the rattlesnake in the
novel’s epigraph that educates its victim through its attack, Zenia allows the three women
to recognize the dormant potential for violence held within each one of them, a
realization which, in many ways, is far less dangerous than their denial of such a fact.
original name has been displaced by the patronym “Offred,” struggles to survive within
the patriarchal dystopia of Gilead. Pressured by the ruling elite to punish others’
unsanctioned acts of violence, Offred and the other Handmaids are compelled to partake
in physical violence that only superficially suggests their agency, reflecting instances of
contained subversion and ironic freedom scattered throughout the novel. Despite the
assurances of safety offered to all women during Gilead’s rise to power, the instatement
of the new ruling class demonstrates how women have not escaped violence, but become
others in order to achieve the goals and perpetuate the beliefs of the new totalitarian state.
Conversely examining the female violence that occurs not on account of an excess of
political and ethical structure, but due to a lack of it, Moral Disorder (2006) highlights
223
women’s self-harm outside the rubric of the Red Shoes Syndrome, and the deleterious
“impressionable” (39) and who deeply internalizes her world, Lizzie sees beyond the
edifices of order that are tentatively offered amidst the political unrest and radical cultural
change of late 1960s and early 1970s Canada to discern her lack of security and
belonging. As such, her attempted suicide appears as an ominous sign of her nation’s
social trends reflects the processes of condensation that appear more dramatically and
impulses and enactments of physical violence towards men (and vice-versa) frequently
appear as individual instances of more expansive social patterns and the inequities of
power that similarly incite political rivalry and internecine wars. Despite the
permits its appearing “more ‘intimate’” (“A Question” 42) than her other writings, Power
Politics simultaneously suggests that the speaker’s and her lover’s “bodies / are populated
with billions” (9) and are “becom[ing] slowly more public” (30). Individual poems, such
as “They are hostile nations,” “Their attitudes differ” and “My beautiful wooden leader,”
insist on this reading of domestic violence within larger frames to reveal how the failures
women’s violence to expose the interface between private and public power struggles
224
similarly appears in The Circle Game (1966). “On the Streets, Love” and “Playing
Cards” offer the bellicose woman as a distinctly public image, permitting the battle of the
sexes to become a microcosmic representation of “all the other games” (32) and of more
widespread struggles. In particular, the desire of the female speaker in “The Circle
Game” to escape the entrapment of her male lover and the history of colonial domination,
to “break / … bones, [his] prisoning rhythms” and “all the glass cases” (55) holding
“weapons / that were once outside / sharpening themselves on war” (51), demonstrates
how freedom, for both the individual woman and the nation, is often achieved at the high
works. As the first book of poems to be published by Atwood after the birth of her
daughter, Two-Headed Poems explores the disparate capacities of women, where “Five
Poems for Dolls,” “A Paper Bag,” “The Woman Makes Peace With Her Faulty Heart,”
and “A Red Shirt” indicate how “female” must be re-conceptualized to acknowledge how
women partake in behaviors that undermine the traditional belief that they “should be / a
the focus on the individual offered in such poems, the collection more broadly
contextualizes women’s duality as similar to Canada’s, given the tensions between the
nation’s English and French factions that are brought to light most explicitly in “Two-
Headed Poems” and “The Right Hand Fights the Left.” As such, depictions of women’s
brutality in Two-Headed Poems, as in Power Politics and The Circle Game, remain
225
connected to broader social issues, indicating how such renderings are consistent with the
poetry.
exploring women’s capacity to turn their violence back upon themselves. Like Moral
Disorder, True Stories frequently investigates women’s self-harm outside the context of
the Red Shoes Syndrome, suggesting that the reasons for women’s self-destructiveness
range far beyond the struggles of the female artist. Moreover, while women in “True
Romances,” “Bluejays” and “Small Poems for the Winter Solstice” view self-inflicted
violence as a means justified by its ends, enabling them to prove (to themselves or others)
their humanity, their desire to live, and/or their freedom, others, such as the woman in
“Christmas Carols” who “threw herself from a rooftop, thirty / times raped & pregnant by
the enemy / who did this to her” (56), regard their self-harm as a paradoxical gesture of
violence committed not by themselves, but by another. Connecting with other instances
Poem That Can Never Be Written,” and “Spelling,” and perhaps less recognizably in
“Hotel,” “The Arrest of the Stockbroker,” and “Torture,” such bleak descriptions of
female vulnerability extend the focus of this study by indicating how women are often
Atwood’s insistence on women’s potential to alter power dynamics and do great harm
violence.
226
While women’s attacks against other women are, surprisingly, almost entirely
absent from Atwood’s poetry, their destruction of nature is widely manifest, suggesting
how certain themes are explored more thoroughly in Atwood’s fiction, while others are
given greater focus in her verse. Atwood’s developing understanding of the vulnerability
of animals and nature is apparent in her early use of such non-human entities as
figurations to depict human vulnerability to women’s attacks. This is perhaps best seen in
The Animals in That Country (1968), where poems such as “A Pursuit” depict a female
speaker “hunt[ing]” (66) her lover “Through the wilderness of the flesh / across the
mind’s ice” (66). Such representations contrast with her later renderings in the “Snake
Poems” of Interlunar (1984), where the violence done to animals is given its own
consideration and recognized as harm enacted against sentient life, rather than a vehicle
for understanding the harms humans enact against each other, reflecting the maturation of
Burned House (1995) and The Door (2007), Atwood insists that such brutality against
non-human and human others indicates women’s participation in the violence that in part
characterizes the natural world, drawing connections between women and the female fox
in “Red Fox,” who displays a “white knife of a smile” (17), and the cat in “Mourning for
Cats,” who is “vital and on the prowl, / and brutal towards other forms of life” (11).
While Atwood distinguishes between the harms enacted by humans and that which is
implicated in the former, her representations of the behaviors shared between humans and
other species suggest that while female violence is not condoned or excused, it is to be
expected.
227
Atwood’s attempts to trace the history of female violence in section two of
Morning in the Burned House through her depictions of legendary women such as the
Egyptian deity Sekhmet, Helen of Troy, Cressida, and Manet’s Olympia attest that
female violence is nothing new, perhaps extending as far back as the beginnings of
human kind. Nonetheless, it continues to pose hermeneutic challenges that vary between
artistic media. Atwood’s insistence that she “do[es]n’t write books of poetry … like
novels” (“Dissecting” 4), and the processes of condensation that give her poetic subjects
a “doubled gravity” (“The Words”, Interlunar 83), intimate the need to reconfigure the
her understanding of the poem as a fundamentally aural entity that produces “echoes” and
examination of indirect and verbal violence in particular with the distinct qualities of
Atwood’s poetic form and effect, and thus, of reserving such analyses for future studies.
228
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