{"id":12006,"date":"2010-06-04T00:00:10","date_gmt":"2010-06-04T04:00:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/fryeblog.blog.lib.mcmaster.ca\/?p=12006"},"modified":"2010-06-04T00:00:10","modified_gmt":"2010-06-04T04:00:10","slug":"frye-and-feminism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/macblog.mcmaster.ca\/fryeblog\/2010\/06\/04\/frye-and-feminism\/","title":{"rendered":"Frye and Apocalyptic Feminism"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>httpv:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=TH_r6-JpO9Q<\/p>\n<p>On this date in 1913, militant suffragette <a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Emily_Davison\" target=\"_blank\">Emily Davison<\/a> was struck by King George V&#8217;s horse at the Epsom Derby.\u00a0 She died four days later.\u00a0 She ran out onto the track (as you can see from the footage above) with a suffragette flag, which she evidently intended to attach to the king&#8217;s horse.<\/p>\n<p>One of Frye&#8217;s entries in notebook 44 consists of this single sentence: &#8220;I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s coincidence or accident that feminism and ecology should become central issues at the same time&#8221; (<em>CW<\/em> 5, 206).<\/p>\n<p>A modified version of the phrase appears again in chapter six of <em>Words with Power<\/em>, &#8220;Second Variation: The Garden&#8221;:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Here we are concerned with the oasis-paradise of gardens and fountains that derives from the Biblical Eden and the Song of Songs.\u00a0 It may be an impossibly idealized vision of a very tame aspect of nature, especially when in Isaiah it extends to a world in which the lion lies down with the lamb (11:6 ff.).\u00a0 But it is the beginning of a sense that exploiting nature nature is quite as evil as exploiting other human beings.\u00a0 Admittedly, the Bible itself has done a good deal to promote the conception of nature as something to be dominated by human arrogance, for historical reasons we have glanced at.\u00a0 Contact with some allegedly primitive societies in more modern times, with their intense care for the earth that sustains them, has helped to give us some notion of how skewed many aspects of our traditional ideology are on this point.\u00a0 But even in the Bible the bride-garden metaphor works in the opposite direction by associating nature and love, and I doubt if it is an accident that feminism and ecology have moved into the foreground of social issues at roughly the same time.\u00a0 (<em>WP <\/em>225)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>As a matter of myth manifesting primary concern, the equalization of the sexes is implicit in biblical typology.\u00a0 As a social and historical development, of course, it is all too often an ugly business typical of issues pertaining to power.\u00a0 But the equalization of the sexes also has an apocalyptic dimension, as Frye&#8217;s rendering it in chapter six of <em>Words with Power <\/em>suggests.<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p>In opening his discussion on the variation of the Garden,<em> <\/em>Frye observes that before the creation of Eve, Adam\u2014or more properly, \u201cthe adam,\u201d derived from the feminine root \u201c<em>adamah<\/em>,\u201d meaning \u201cearth\u201d\u2014\u201ccan have been at best only symbolically male.\u201d\u00a0 Therefore, what was symbolically female before the appearance of Eve must have been the garden itself.\u00a0 The garden, then, is the adam\u2019s symbolic mate, although it is not anything he can mate with.\u00a0 With the creation of Eve\u2014\u201cwho, it should be noted, is the supreme and culminating creation\u201d\u2014we have the \u201cseed\u201d of the human community, which interposes \u201cbetween the individual consciousness and its environment\u201d (<em>WP<\/em> 191).\u00a0 This in turn suggests that the derived-from-the-female human community is the archetypal context of all human creativity, a counter-environment to the natural one in which we produce the social conditions of our existence as well as our art.<\/p>\n<p>After the fall male supremacy becomes the primary social fact, although it is also very emphatically a fallen one. Frye notes that if humankind falls as woman, then, typologically, \u201cwoman would have to be the central figure in the restoration of the original sexual and social state.&#8221;\u00a0 The centrality of the archetypally and typologically female also accounts for the sexual imagery of the Book of Revelation, \u201cin which Christ alone is male, and the body or society of the redeemed in Jerusalem, the community which is all souls, whether male or female physical bodies, are symbolically female\u201d (<em>WP <\/em>192).\u00a0 It follows from such imagery that even the biological and \u201csocially-gendered\u201d male is also metaphorically female, the implications of which hard-line ideologues of all stripes conspicuously overlook.\u00a0 The Bible\u2019s single <em>erotic<\/em> type for this relation between the symbolically male and female is the Song of Songs where the bride\u2019s body is identified with the gardens and running waters of paradise.\u00a0 Therefore, the Bible\u2019s (and literature\u2019s) promise of an apocalyptically restored sexual identity derives from the fact that when Adam and Eve fall after eating the forbidden fruit of the knowledge of good and evil, what they end up with is \u201ca repressive morality founded on a sexual neurosis\u201d; that is, the first thing they do after eating the fruit is to see that they are naked and are <a href=\"http:\/\/fryeblog.blog.lib.mcmaster.ca\/2010\/04\/18\/quote-of-the-day-12\/\" target=\"_blank\">ashamed<\/a>.\u00a0 This supposed \u201cmoral knowledge\u201d is disastrous when it is attached to \u201ca sense of shame and concealment about sex, and was forbidden because in that situation it ceases to be genuine knowledge of anything, even of good and evil\u201d (<em>WP<\/em> 194).\u00a0 According to the typological perspective of the mythology, this is what we have been living with and attempting to overcome via the creative arts ever since.<\/p>\n<p>The primary concern of the variation of the Garden is sex, and the point of it is that the apocalyptic union of a redeemed human community with its natural environment \u201cis not simple sublimation but an expansion of sexual emotions\u201d (<em>WP<\/em> 200).\u00a0 The three elements of the myth to keep in mind<em> <\/em> are first, its genuine and undisplaced form, which is \u201cthe imagery of ascent to and descent from a higher world through love\u201d; second, its ideological adaptation, which is the hierarchical \u201cstructure of authority\u201d derived from this top-to-bottom imagery; and, third, its demonic parody as the ideologically-driven fear and loathing of our sexual being, which is still evident in everything from traditionally patriarchal \u201cvalues conservativism\u201d to the misandry of some branches of feminism.<\/p>\n<p>The genuine form of the Garden myth involves the equalization of the male and female, as well as the identification of human creative effort with the generative power of nature, the two in combination representing the apocalyptic reunion of the human community with its natural environment.\u00a0 And, obviously, the symbolically and biologically female is indispensable to this process.\u00a0 In the Song of Songs the bride is described as \u201ca garden enclosed, a fountain sealed,\u201d and is also \u201ctraditionally identified in Christian typology with the Virgin Mary, who is metaphorically a replica, in the form of an individual human body, of the original unfallen garden\u201d (<em>WP <\/em>202).\u00a0 But if the Song of Songs is the type whose antitype is the union of Christ the Bridegroom with the Church his Bride, then where does the virgin mother end and the bride begin?\u00a0 Frye observes that, in the New Testament<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>there are two aspects of male-female imagery: one is concerned with the virgin mother and Jesus as a son, the other with the imagery of bridegroom and bride.\u00a0 One aspect is linked to the first coming and the Incarnation, the other to the second coming and the Apocalypse\u2026 In the condensed form of pure metaphor, this would mean the rejuvenation of a mother-figure into a bride-figure, the mother of the Word and the bride of the Spirit.\u00a0 (<em>WP<\/em> 202-3)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>This typological identification of mother, virgin and bride in turn suggests that \u201cpsychologically, the rejuvenation of the mother is an internalizing and assimilating of a mother-figure; socially, it is an equalizing of a figure of authority.\u201d\u00a0 These three aspects of female symbolism in the Bible therefore present, first, \u201cwoman as one of the two human sexes,\u201d second, \u201cwoman as the representative of human community,\u201d and third, \u201cwoman as symbol of the fact that humanity cannot be redeemed in isolation from nature\u201d (<em>WP<\/em> 203-4).\u00a0 The apocalyptically redeemed human community, in other words, does not exclude let alone subordinate the socially \u201cinferior\u201d female; it resurrects her and makes her the very threshold of redemption, nothwithstanding the ideologically driven resentments of both patriarchal social dominance and some feminist critical theory.<\/p>\n<p>In the strictly ideological adaptation of the myth denoting the structure of social authority, \u201cit is inevitable that the foreground female figures should suggest maternal authority.\u201d\u00a0 It is for this reason that the \u201cFather-God and virgin mother of Christianity were reproduced in a priesthood of fathers and a mother church, with celibate orders of brothers and sisters completing a structure of incest taboos\u201d (<em>WP <\/em>205).\u00a0 This is reflected in the poetic tradition by the so-called Courtly Love convention, which also suggests a hierarchy of authority where \u201cthe lover attaches himself to a mistress who commands his utter and unquestioning devotion, but without any sexual contact and with no relation to the lover\u2019s marriage\u201d (<em>WP <\/em>207).\u00a0 Thus the ladder of love suggests both Plato\u2019s ascent\u2014which leads to a vision where, as Frye puts it, \u201cidentity is love and difference is beauty\u201d (<em>WP<\/em> 85)\u2014as well as a fall or descent into a lower world of ideologically defined morality and sexual self-consciousness.\u00a0 One of the features of this lower world, it bears repeating, is the establishment of a fallen patriarchal society.\u00a0 Another is the descent from a paradisal form of life to an agricultural one, suggesting humanity\u2019s alienation from the natural environment\u2014the continued alienated exploitation of which may result in an \u201cend times\u201d that could prove to be the ecological equivalent of Armageddon if humanity is not soon able to make its primary concerns regarding the environment primary rather than secondary.<\/p>\n<p>There is at least one other significant ideological ramification of the sexual imagery of the Bible, one in which \u201cthe center is symbolically male and the circumference is symbolically female\u201d (<em>WP <\/em>208).\u00a0 This imagery of center and circumference is presented \u201cin the final vision of the Apocalypse, where the Bride is the city of the New Jerusalem with the Bridegroom as the temple in the middle of it, except that now there is no place called the temple, but only the body of Christ.\u00a0 Similarly with the restored garden and the tree of life in the midst of it\u201d (<em>WP <\/em>209).\u00a0 But because centers and circumferences are metaphorically interchangeable and kerygmatically interpenetrating, the female as circumference also implies a <em>socially<\/em> revolutionary vision represented by the Book of Ruth, in which the female as center is the type for the exiled state of all humanity.\u00a0 Ruth, with its \u201cthemes connected with the position of women in Biblical history, such as levirate marriage and miraculously late births,\u201d suggests \u201ca dimension in which woman expands into a kind of proletariat, enduring, continuous, exploited humanity, awaiting emancipation in a hostile world: in short, an Israel eventually to be delivered from Egypt\u201d (<em>WP<\/em> 215).<\/p>\n<p>Finally, the demonic parody of the Garden myth is \u201cthe sado-masochistic cycle, in which the female may tyrannize over the male or vice versa.\u201d\u00a0 Here again the metaphorical link between the female and nature is preserved.\u00a0 When the female is a mother, she is associated with Mother Nature, typically represented as \u201can earth-goddess\u201d who presides over \u201ca human society in an embryonic state, imprisoned in nature\u2019s cycle of life, death and rebirth\u201d (<em>WP<\/em> 218).\u00a0 In a very real (that is, metaphorical) sense, it is from the female that human society must struggle to get born.\u00a0 This figure also modulates into the \u201c<em>femme fatale<\/em>\u201d and Robert Graves\u2019s \u201cwhite goddess\u201d in her threefold form as Cynthia, goddess of the moon, Diana, virgin huntress of the forest, and Hecate, queen of hell.\u00a0 When the <em>femme fatale<\/em> is a disdainful or unattainable lover, the association is inevitably with war because \u201caggressiveness in war seems to go with a weakness in love that sooner or later turns destructiveness into self-destructiveness\u201d (<em>WP<\/em> 222).\u00a0 This may help explain why Western civilization\u2019s secular founding myth is the Trojan War of Homer\u2019s <em>Iliad<\/em>, which was inspired by the jealousy of Helen\u2019s beauty and her own voluntary and destructive transfer from one society to another, a theme dealt with in <em>Troilus and Cressida<\/em>, Shakespeare\u2019s sardonic version of our Eurocentric etiological myth.\u00a0 The sado-masochistic cycle is also readily reversible, and the <em>femme fatale<\/em> may of course become an all too typical sacrificial victim of male aggression.\u00a0 However, as Frye notes: \u201cMale-dominated as the Western literary tradition has been, it is still strewn with heroines whose lives have been betrayed and blighted by callous lovers.\u00a0 Their reactions range from the ferocity of Medea to the quiet self-obliteration of Ophelia,\u201d neither of whom could be credibly accused of perpetuating the conditions of patriarchy.<\/p>\n<p>This brings us around again to the genuine form of the myth, which is symbolized by the \u201chierogamy or sacred marriage,\u201d and whose type is Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden (<em>WP<\/em> 223).\u00a0 The New Testament\u2019s antitype is Christ the Bridegroom united with the Church his Bride.\u00a0 And, because the explicitly erotic Song of Songs serves as another type, this suggests that \u201cspiritual love expands from the erotic and does not run away from it,\u201d despite the disdain for human sexuality of religious \u201cfundamentalists\u201d everywhere\u2014a sexuality that not only includes Adam and Eve but also arguably includes the \u201cAdam and Steve\u201d so loathed by the homophobia shared by many religions.\u00a0 The typological point of the erotic, after all, is not that it is simply for making babies but that it is also the spiritual dimension for making love, and it therefore includes homosexuality as surely as it encompasses heterosexuality.\u00a0 In the same way, if the union symbolized by the \u201cone flesh\u201d of marriage in Genesis 2:24 is the type, then its antitype is \u201cthe interpenetration of the spirit\u201d in Revelation (<em>WP <\/em>224), or the \u201call in all\u201d of both St. Paul and John Milton.\u00a0 It is worth recalling that Milton\u2019s Raphael in <em>Paradise Lost<\/em> makes it very clear to Adam how inadequate are all notions of heterosexual sex in the missionary position when it comes to love-making among the angels, who are united wherever they touch.\u00a0 Apocalyptic hierogamy also extends to the bride-garden metaphor in which the Bridegroom represents humanity and the Bride nature.\u00a0 A final symbolic aspect of hierogamy is related to the convention that Eros is the creator of the arts because humanity\u2019s biologically procreative capacity has always been associated with its imaginatively creative power.\u00a0 This accounts for the ancient conceit also favored by the Renaissance of the writer as midwife delivering the products of a female Muse, which all by itself demonstrates how readily the biologically and socially-gendered male will identify himself and his efforts as being metaphorically (and therefore prophetically) female.<\/p>\n<p>Like the ladder of wisdom represented by the Mountain, the ladder of love represented by the Garden \u201cleads up to a world which is neither the objective world of science nor the subjective world of psychology\u201d (<em>WP <\/em>226).\u00a0 The world at the top of the ladder, however, does interpenetrate with both because Mountain and Garden are kerygmatic expressions of the primary concerns that inform the mythological underpinnings of the narratives of science and psychology alike. The disclosure of primary concern in the variation of the Garden therefore also has implications for literary criticism because the progress of criticism \u201chas a good deal to do with recognizing beauty in a greater and greater variety of phenomena and situations and works of art.\u201d\u00a0 It follows that \u201cthe ugly, in proportion, tends to become whatever violates primary concern,\u201d adding the appropriate dimension of the \u201cmoral\u201d that derives (as Oscar Wilde knew very well) not from the ideological but from the aesthetic.\u00a0 Which is to say, criticism reveals, or at least should reveal, that the experience of beauty is linked to a sense of the teleological\u2014that is, a process realizing itself to a desired end\u2014which \u201ccannot be reduced to a function that can be demonstrated, although the twentieth century has been making various ill-advised attempts at such reductions.&#8221;\u00a0 In any event, the kerygmatic hierogamy in which the Bridegroom is love and the Bride beauty \u201cleads to the discovery of the reality of beauty,\u201d which is something \u201cwe partly perceive and partly create, something belonging both to art and to nature.\u201d\u00a0 Once again, the typological vision of the Bible reveals \u201cthe great recognition that lies behind the totality of human creation\u201d (<em>WP <\/em>227).\u00a0 Such a recognition is the humanly concerned principle of creation itself, which is continuous and ongoing, is as particular in expression as it is universal in reference, and is manifested everywhere in the eternal spring of the creative imagination \u201cwhen the time of the singing of birds has come\u201d (<em>WP<\/em> 228).<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>httpv:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=TH_r6-JpO9Q On this date in 1913, militant suffragette Emily Davison was struck by King George V&#8217;s horse at the Epsom Derby.\u00a0 She died four days later.\u00a0 She ran out onto the track (as you can see from the footage above) with a suffragette flag, which she evidently intended to attach to the king&#8217;s horse. One [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":20,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[8,79,87,92,103,125,148,159,165],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-12006","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-archetype","category-ideology","category-kerygma","category-literary-criticism","category-myth","category-primary-concern","category-society","category-typology","category-video"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Frye and Apocalyptic Feminism - The Educated Imagination<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/macblog.mcmaster.ca\/fryeblog\/2010\/06\/04\/frye-and-feminism\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Frye and Apocalyptic Feminism - The Educated Imagination\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"httpv:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=TH_r6-JpO9Q On this date in 1913, militant suffragette Emily Davison was struck by King George V&#8217;s horse at the Epsom Derby.\u00a0 She died four days later.\u00a0 She ran out onto the track (as you can see from the footage above) with a suffragette flag, which she evidently intended to attach to the king&#8217;s horse. 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