When We Dead Awaken: Writing as Re-Vision
Author(s): Adrienne Rich
Source: College English, Vol. 34, No. 1, Women, Writing and Teaching (Oct., 1972), pp. 18-30
Published by: National Council of Teachers of English
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/375215
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能力重新审视,
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ADRIENNE RICH
When We Dead Awaken:
Writing as Re-Vision
IBSEN'S "WHEN WE DEAD AWAKEN" is a play about the use that the male artist
and thinker-in the process of creating culture as we know it-has made of women,
in his life and in his work; and about a woman's slow struggling awakening to the
use to which her life has been put. Bernard Shaw wrote in 1900 of this play:
[Ibsen] shows us that no degradation ever devized or permitted is as disastrous as
this degradation; that through it women can die into luxuries for men and yet can
kill them; that men and women are becoming conscious of this; and that what remains
to be seen as perhaps the most interesting of all imminent social developments is
what will happen "when we dead awaken".'
It's exhilarating to be alive in a time of awakening consciousness; it can also be
confusing, disorienting, and painful. This awakening of dead or sleeping con-
sciousness has already affected the lives of millions of women, even those who don't
know it yet. It is also affecting the lives of men, even those who deny its claims
upon them. The argument will go on whether an oppressive economic class
system is responsible for the oppressive nature of male/female relations, or
whether, in fact, the sexual class system is the original model on which all the
others are based. But in the last few years connections have been drawn between
our sexual lives and our political institutions, which are inescapable and illumi-
nating. The sleepwalkers are coming awake, and for the first time this awakening
has a collective reality; it is no longer such a lonely thing to open one's eyes.
Re-vision-the act of looking back, of seeing with fresh eyes, of entering an old
text from a new critical direction-is for us more than a chapter in cultural history:
it is an act of survival. Until we can understand the assumptions in which we are
drenched we cannot know ourselves. And this drive to self-knowledge, for woman,
is more than a search for identity: it is part of her refusal of the self-destructiveness
of male-dominated society. A radical critique of literature, feminist in its impulse,
would take the work first of all as a clue to how we live, how we have been living,
how we have been led to imagine ourselves, how our language has trapped as well
as liberated us; and how we can begin to see-and therefore live-afresh. A change
Adrienne Rich has published six volumes of poetry, of which the most recent is The Will to
Change (W. W. Norton, 1971). She lives in New York City and teaches at City College,
City University of New York. During 1972-73 she is the Fannie Hurst Visiting Professor of
Creative Writing at Brandeis University. This paper was written for the MLA Commission
on the Status of Women in the Profession and read at the MLA meetings in December 1971.
1G. B. Shaw, The Quintessence of Ibsenism (Hill and Wang, 1922), p. 139.
18
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降低,恶化,堕落
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发明,
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即将发生的,临近的
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[igˈziləreitiŋ]使人兴奋的
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使人迷惑的
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残酷的,压迫的
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[ˌinisˈkeipəbəl]无法逃脱,无法避免的
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启蒙的
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梦游病者
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湿透
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占首要地位,支配,俯视
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根本的,激进的
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批评,批评法,评论
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主张男女平等的,女权主义的
When We Dead Awaken: Writing as Re-Vision 19
in the concept of sexual identity is essential if we are not going to see the old
political order re-assert itself in every new revolution. We need to know the writ-
ing of the past, and know it differently than we have ever known it; not to pass on
a tradition but to break its hold over us.
For writers, and at this moment for women writers in particular, there is the
challenge and promise of a whole new psychic geography to be explored. But
there is also a difficult and dangerous walking on the ice, as we try to find language
and images for a consciousness we are just coming into, and with little in the past
to support us. I want to talk about some aspects of this difficulty and this danger.
Jane Harrison, the great classical anthropologist, wrote in 1914 in a letter to her
friend Gilbert Murray:
By the by, about "Women," it has bothered me often-why do women never want
to write poetry about Man as a sex-why is Woman a dream and a terror to man and
not the other way around? . . . Is it mere convention and propriety, or something
deeper?2
I think Jane Harrison's question cuts deep into the myth-making tradition, the
romantic tradition; deep into what women and men have been to each other; and
deep into the psyche of the woman writer. Thinking about that question, I began
thinking of the work of two 20th-century women poets, Sylvia Plath and Diane
Wakoski. It strikes me that in the work of both Man appears as, if not a dream,
a fascination and a terror; and that the source of the fascination and the terror is,
simply, Man's power-to dominate, tyrannize, choose, or reject the woman. The
charisma of Man seems to come purely from his power over her and his control
of the world by force, not from anything fertile or life-giving in him. And, in the
work of both these poets, it is finally the woman's sense of herself-embattled, pos-
sessed-that gives the poetry its dynamic charge, its rhythms of struggle, need, will,
and female energy. Convention and propriety are perhaps not the right words, but
until recently this female anger and this furious awareness of the Man's power over
her were not available materials to the female poet, who tended to write of Love
as the source of her suffering, and to view that victimization by Love as an almost
inevitable fate. Or, like Marianne Moore and Elizabeth Bishop, she kept human
sexual relationships at a measured and chiselled distance in her poems.
One answer to Jane Harrison's question has to be that historically men and
women have played very different parts in each others' lives. Where woman has
been a luxury for man, and has served as the painter's model and the poet's muse,
but also as comforter, nurse, cook, bearer of his seed, secretarial assistant and copy-
ist of manuscripts, man has played a quite different role for the female artist.
Henry James repeats an incident which the writer Prosper Merimee described, of
how, while he was living with George Sand,
he once opened his eyes, in the raw winter dawn, to see his companion, in a dressing-
gown, on her knees before the domestic hearth, a candlestick beside her and a red
madras round her head, making bravely, with her own hands, the fire that was to
enable her to sit down betimes to urgent pen and paper. The story represents him as
2J. G. Stewart, Jane Ellen Harrison: A Portrait from Letters (London, 1959), p. 140.
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20 COLLEGE ENGLISH
having felt that the spectacle chilled his ardor and tried his taste; her appearance was
unfortunate, her occupation an inconsequence, and her industry a reproof-the result
of all of which was a lively irritation and an early rupture."3
I am suggesting that the specter of this kind of male judgment, along with the
active discouragement and thwarting of her needs by a culture controlled by
males, has created problems for the woman writer: problems of contact with her-
self, problems of language and style, problems of energy and survival.
In rereading Virginia Woolf's A Room Of One's Own for the first time in some
years, I was astonished at the sense of effort, of pains taken, of dogged tentative-
ness, in the tone of that essay. And I recognized that tone. I had heard it often
enough, in myself and in other women. It is the tone of a woman almost in touch
with her anger, who is determined not to appear angry, who is willing herself to
be calm, detached, and even charming in a roomful of men where things have been
said which are attacks on her very integrity. Virginia Woolf is addressing an audi-
ence of women, but she is acutely conscious-as she always was-of being over-
heard by men: by Morgan and Lytton and Maynard Keynes and for that matter
by her father, Leslie Stephen. She drew the language out into an exacerbated
thread in her determination to have her own sensibility yet protect it from those
masculine presences. Only at rare moments in that essay do you hear the passion in
her voice; she was trying to sound as cool as Jane Austen, as Olympian as Shakes-
peare, because that is the way the men of the culture thought a writer should
sound.
No male writer has written primarily or even largely for women, or with the
sense of women's criticism as a consideration when he chooses his materials, his
theme, his language. But to a lesser or greater extent, every woman writer has
written for men even when, like Virginia Woolf, she was supposed to be address-
ing women. If we have come to the point when this balance might begin to change,
when women can stop being haunted, not only by "convention and propriety" but
by internalized fears of being and saying themselves, then it is an extraordinary
moment for the woman writer-and reader.
I have hesitated to do what I am going to do now, which is to use myself as an
illustration. For one thing, it's a lot easier and less dangerous to talk about other
women writers. But there is something else. Like Virginia Woolf, I am aware of
the women who are not with us here because they are washing the dishes and
looking after the children. Nearly fifty years after she spoke, that fact remains
largely unchanged. And I am thinking also of women whom she left out of the
picture altogether-women who are washing other people's dishes and caring for
other people's children, not to mention women who went on the streets last night
in order to feed their children. We seem to be special women here, we have liked
to think of ourselves as special, and we have known that men would tolerate, even
romanticize us as special, as long as our words and actions didn't threaten their
privilege of tolerating or rejecting us according to their ideas of what a special
3Henry James, "Notes on Novelists" in Selected Literary Criticism of Henry James, ed.
Morris Shapira (London: Heineman, 1963), pp. 157-58.
When We Dead Awaken: Writing as Re-Vision 21
woman ought to be. An important insight of the radical women's movement, for
me, has been how divisive and how ultimately destructive is this myth of the
special woman, who is also the token woman. Every one of us here in this room
has had great luck-we are teachers, writers, academicians; our own gifts could not
have been enough, for we all know women whose gifts are buried or aborted. Our
struggles can have meaning only if they can help to change the lives of women
whose gifts-and whose very being-continue to be thwarted.
My own luck was being born white and middle-class into a house full of books,
with a father who encouraged me to read and write. So for about twenty years I
wrote for a particular man, who criticized and praised me and made me feel I was
indeed "special." The obverse side of this, of course, was that I tried for a long
time to please him, or rather, not to displease him. And then of course there were
other men-writers, teachers-the Man, who was not a terror or a dream but a
literary master and a master in other ways less easy to acknowledge. And there
were all those poems about women, written by men: it seemed to be a given that
men wrote poems and women frequently inhabited them. These women were
almost always beautiful, but threatened with the loss of beauty, the loss of youth-
the fate worse than death. Or, they were beautiful and died young, like Lucy and
Lenore. Or, the woman was like Maud Gonne, cruel and disastrously mistaken, and
the poem reproached her because she had refused to become a luxury for the poet.
A lot is being said today about the influence that the myths and images of women
have on all of us who are products of culture. I think it has been a peculiar con-
fusion to the girl or woman who tries to write because she is peculiarly susceptible
to language. She goes to poetry or fiction looking for her way of being in the
world, since she too has been putting words and images together; she is looking
eagerly for guides, maps possibilities; and over and over in the "words' masculine
persuasive force" of literature she comes up against something that negates every-
thing she is about: she meets the image of Woman in books written by men. She
finds a terror and a dream, she finds a beautiful pale face, she finds La Belle Dame
Sans Merci, she finds Juliet or Tess or Salome, but precisely what she does not
find is that absorbed, drudging, puzzled, sometimes inspired creature, herself, who
sits at a desk trying to put words together.
So what does she do? What did I do? I read the older women poets with their
peculiar keenness and ambivalence: Sappho, Christina Rossetti, Emily Dickinson,
Elinor Wylie, Edna Millay, H.D. I discovered that the woman poet most admired
at the time (by men) was Marianne Moore, who was maidenly, elegant, intellec-
tual, discreet. But even in reading these women I was looking in them for the
same things I had found in the poetry of men, because I wanted women poets
to be the equals of men, and to be equal was still confused with sounding the same.
I know that my style was formed first by male poets: by the men I was reading
as an undergraduate-Frost, Dylan Thomas, Donne, Auden, MacNiece, Stevens,
Yeats. What I chiefly learned from them was craft. But poems are like dreams:
in them you put what you don't know you know. Looking back at poems I wrote
before I was 21, I'm startled because beneath the conscious craft are glimpses of
the split I even then experienced between the girl who wrote poems, who defined
22 COLLEGE ENGLISH
herself in writing poems, and the girl who was to define herself by her relation-
ships with men. "Aunt Jennifer's Tigers," written while I was a student, looks
with deliberate detachment at this split.
Aunt Jennifer's tigers stride across a screen,
Bright topaz denizens of a world of green.
They do not fear the men beneath the tree;
They pace in sleek chivalric certainty.
Aunt Jennifer's fingers fluttering through her wool
Find even the ivory needle hard to pull.
The massive weight of Uncle's wedding band
Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer's hand.
When Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie
Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by.
The tigers in the panel that she made
Will go on striding, proud and unafraid.4
In writing this poem, composed and apparently cool as it is, I thought I was
creating a portrait of an imaginary woman. But this woman suffers from the oppo-
sition of her imagination, worked out in tapestry, and her life-style, "ringed with
ordeals she was mastered by." It was important to me that Aunt Jennifer was a
person as distinct from myself as possible-distanced by the formalism of the poem,
by its objective, observant tone-even by putting the woman in a different gener-
ation.
In those years formalism was part of the strategy-like asbestos gloves, it allowed
me to handle materials I couldn't pick up barehanded. (A later strategy was to
use the persona of a man, as I did in "The Loser.") I finished college, published
my first book by a fluke, as it seemed to me, and broke off a love affair. I took
a job, lived alone, went on writing, fell in love. I was young, full of energy, and
the book seemed to mean that others agreed I was a poet. Because I was also deter-
mined to have a "full" woman's life, I plunged in my early twenties into marriage
and had three children before I w^s thirty. There was nothing overt in the environ-
ment to warn me: these were the '50's, and in reaction to the earlier wave of fem-
inism, middle-class women were making careers of domestic perfection, working to
send their husbands through professional schools, then retiring to raise large
families. People were moving out to the suburbs, technology was going to be the
answer to everything, even sex; the family was in its glory. Life was extremely
private; women were isolated from each other by the loyalties of marriage. I have
a sense that women didn't talk to each other much in the fifties-not about their
secret emptinesses, their frustrations. I went on trying to write; my second book
4Adrienne Rich, A Change of World (Yale University Press, 1951). Quoted by permission
of the author.
When We Dead Awuaken: Writing as Re-Vision 23
and first child appeared in the same month. But by the time that book came out I
was already dissatisfied with those poems, which seemed to me mere exercises for
poems I hadn't written. The book was praised, however, for its "gracefulness"; I
had a marriage and a child. If there were doubts, if there were periods of null
depression or active despairing, these could only mean that I was ungrateful, in-
satiable, perhaps a monster.
About the time my third child was born, I felt that I had either to consider
myself a failed woman and a failed poet, or to try to find somne synthesis by
which to understand what was happening to me. What frightened me most was
the sense of drift, of being pulled along on a current which called itself my
destiny, but in which I seemed to be losing touch with whoever I had been, with
the girl who had experienced her own will and energy almost ecstatically at times,
walking around a city or riding a train at night or typing in a student room. In
a poem about my grandmother I wrote (of myself): "A young girl, thought sleep-
ing, is certified dead."5 I was writing very little, partly from fatigue, that female
fatigue of suppressed anger and the loss of contact with her own being; partly
from the discontinuity of female life with its attention to small chores, errands,
work that others constantly undo, small children's constant needs. What I did
write was unconvincing to me; my anger and frustration were hard to acknowl-
edge in or out of poems because in fact I cared a great deal about my husband and
my children. Trying to look back and understand that time I have tried to analyze
the real