Sunday, November 23, 2008

Celebrating Patriarchal Values

Celebrating Patriarchal Values
In the Politically Incorrect Guide to English and American Literature (a part of the bestselling P.I.G. series), Dr. Elizabeth Kantor writes, "Miss Jane Austen found it quite natural that men and women should occupy roles defined by their sexes. Her religion, which she took very seriously indeed, taught her that wives should obey their husbands. "Perhaps even more to the point, it taught her that human misery is caused not by traditional societal structures but by individual sin, and that every member of the human race, male or female, is capable of vice and folly and has a duty to struggle against them". This struggle - not the war between the sexes or a campaign of subversive resistance to the patriarchy - provides the drama in Jane Austen's novels...

Jane Austen's novels show the failure of female self-control, on the one hand, and men's abdication of their proper responsibility, on the other, as among the chief causes of women's unhappiness. Far from being 'subversive' of traditional gender roles, Jane Austen's novels celebrate them.....The feminists and other postmodernist critics have resorted to a variety of subterfuges to convince their readers - and possibly even themselves - that Jane Austen was in some sense in sympathy with their goals..."Male human beings seem to have their own characteristic flaws - which definitely aren't the things feminists accuse men of". The feminists' villains insist on dominating women. Jane Austen's villains are more likely to shirk their responsibilities. Women in Jane Austen's novels cause pain by being bossy and interfering. But most of the damage men do is because they don't involve themselves and take charge. THERE AREN'T A LOT OF REPRESSIVE PATRIARCHS IN JANE AUSTEN'S NOVELS. WHAT THERE ARE A LOT OF, ARE MEN WHO AREN'T PATRIARCHAL ENOUGH.." (pp. 137-138, 145).

And that's why so many feminists attempt either to dismiss Jane Austen altogether or they resort to deception and literary subterfuge. Some truths are, well, just plain inconvenient.

You'll all have to excuse me, I have a sudden need to put on some Hai Karate and celebrate patriarchal values.

Credit: quick-pickup-rules.blogspot.com

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