Perhaps it’s the same trait that’s made it difficult for me to adhere to a particular cause that also makes me able to construct characters in my fiction: the desire scrutinise things from multiple perspectives. But when it comes to women and equality I struggle to find, let alone empathise with, a counter argument. Who could deny that whatever the gender, a person doing a job should be paid the same as another person doing the same job, irrespective of the shape of their dangly bits?
The women I write about all lived in a world in which inequality went unquestioned. It wasn't until a little more than a century ago that the suffragette movement was, alongside its Votes for Women campaign, battling to open a political discourse about gender equality, as Sarah Gavron’s recent film Suffragette powerfully demonstrates. But the film also exposes the fact that we still have a long way to go and it is this that the WEP intends to address.
What the film does is create a fictional character at its heart, a working class woman, who becomes the lens through which to tell the story of a movement that has become in many minds associated with the privileged classes. Think of Mrs Banks in Mary Poppins, be-sashed and blithely warbling Sister Suffragette in suburban Cherry Tree Lane. This retelling allows us to understand the brutality of women’s lives and the struggle to be heard. One critic lamented the fact that an invented character was placed at the heart of true events, claiming it weakened the message. I disagree; it is exactly the story of that forgotten woman, speaking for all women of her class, that invests the film with its substantial force.
Women’s stories matter; particularly those that have been swept under the carpet of history. It is a cause close to my heart, as my work as a writer is spent excavating such stories. But there seems to be an unconscious societal urge to ignore them or deem them less important than those of men. We have long been aware of a dearth of good roles for women in Hollywood and this spills over into publishing too. Over the last few years Vida statistics have highlighted the imbalance of female authors being reviewed in the serious press. This opened much needed discussion about women writers being given equality in the world of book prizes and led to a call by novelist Karmila Shamsie for a year of publishing only women.
This is a worthy endeavour but there is something more subtle at play, which was exposed by Nicola Griffith’s recent data study in which she looked not at the gender of authors winning prizes but the gender of the protagonists in prize winning novels. The results were staggering in that overwhelmingly, the central characters in the winning books were male – even when authors were female: Mantel’s Cromwell novels are a good example of this.
What filled me with dismay was that even in the light of this, the shortlist of the latest MAN Booker Prize seemed like celebration of men. Of the six, all but one novel (Anne Tyler’s A Spool of Blue Thread) chosen by judges of both genders, were stories about men or groups of men. It seems from this that we (both men and women) find narratives about men more serious, more worthy of accolades, than those about women.
There is perhaps a tendency to dismiss female focussed literature as romance, rather than idea, driven. Before I’m accused of having a case of sour grapes, I feel that I should state that I want, as much as the next person, the very best books to win awards. But the 2015 booker shortlist poses the question, was there really only a single remarkable book with a female protagonist published in the whole English speaking world this year?
Looking back to the nineteenth century, there is an embarrassment of novels about women and often written by men: Tess of the d’Urbervilles, Madame Bovary, Anna Karenina and so on. But the unifying factor of all those works was that they carried a strong moral message for their readers: women who step out of line (particularly sexually) will get what’s coming to them. Thankfully the novel doesn’t exist so obviously as a moral corrective for society any more but just because it is no longer appropriate to force feed moral messages through the prism of literature, doesn’t mean that women’s stories should vanish altogether from serious fiction.
For millennia we have built our societies on stories, with far reaching effects. Think of the enduring messages from Greek tragedy and epic that continue to resonate in contemporary psychological theory. Fiction holds up a mirror to society but it is also asks questions about what it is to be human and sets patterns by which we find ourselves living. In privileging male stories, albeit unconsciously, we are building a society that automatically puts men on top. But by undermining women in this subtle way we are denying ourselves the potential for a rich and diverse culture.
I believe that change occurs only when attitudes shift and it is just such an attitude shift that the WEP aim to instigate in with their policies. By aiming for, amongst other policies, gender balance in parliament, equal opportunities for girls in education, equal treatment of women in the media and an end to violence against women, then perhaps we can begin to explore new narratives with women at their heart on which to build a richer society.
elizabethfremantle.com @lizfremantle
Women’s Equality Party: https://womensequality.org.uk
Nicola Griffith’s Data study: http://nicolagriffith.com/2015/05/26/books-about-women-tend-not-to-win-awards/
The women I write about all lived in a world in which inequality went unquestioned. It wasn't until a little more than a century ago that the suffragette movement was, alongside its Votes for Women campaign, battling to open a political discourse about gender equality, as Sarah Gavron’s recent film Suffragette powerfully demonstrates. But the film also exposes the fact that we still have a long way to go and it is this that the WEP intends to address.
What the film does is create a fictional character at its heart, a working class woman, who becomes the lens through which to tell the story of a movement that has become in many minds associated with the privileged classes. Think of Mrs Banks in Mary Poppins, be-sashed and blithely warbling Sister Suffragette in suburban Cherry Tree Lane. This retelling allows us to understand the brutality of women’s lives and the struggle to be heard. One critic lamented the fact that an invented character was placed at the heart of true events, claiming it weakened the message. I disagree; it is exactly the story of that forgotten woman, speaking for all women of her class, that invests the film with its substantial force.
Women’s stories matter; particularly those that have been swept under the carpet of history. It is a cause close to my heart, as my work as a writer is spent excavating such stories. But there seems to be an unconscious societal urge to ignore them or deem them less important than those of men. We have long been aware of a dearth of good roles for women in Hollywood and this spills over into publishing too. Over the last few years Vida statistics have highlighted the imbalance of female authors being reviewed in the serious press. This opened much needed discussion about women writers being given equality in the world of book prizes and led to a call by novelist Karmila Shamsie for a year of publishing only women.
This is a worthy endeavour but there is something more subtle at play, which was exposed by Nicola Griffith’s recent data study in which she looked not at the gender of authors winning prizes but the gender of the protagonists in prize winning novels. The results were staggering in that overwhelmingly, the central characters in the winning books were male – even when authors were female: Mantel’s Cromwell novels are a good example of this.
What filled me with dismay was that even in the light of this, the shortlist of the latest MAN Booker Prize seemed like celebration of men. Of the six, all but one novel (Anne Tyler’s A Spool of Blue Thread) chosen by judges of both genders, were stories about men or groups of men. It seems from this that we (both men and women) find narratives about men more serious, more worthy of accolades, than those about women.
There is perhaps a tendency to dismiss female focussed literature as romance, rather than idea, driven. Before I’m accused of having a case of sour grapes, I feel that I should state that I want, as much as the next person, the very best books to win awards. But the 2015 booker shortlist poses the question, was there really only a single remarkable book with a female protagonist published in the whole English speaking world this year?
Looking back to the nineteenth century, there is an embarrassment of novels about women and often written by men: Tess of the d’Urbervilles, Madame Bovary, Anna Karenina and so on. But the unifying factor of all those works was that they carried a strong moral message for their readers: women who step out of line (particularly sexually) will get what’s coming to them. Thankfully the novel doesn’t exist so obviously as a moral corrective for society any more but just because it is no longer appropriate to force feed moral messages through the prism of literature, doesn’t mean that women’s stories should vanish altogether from serious fiction.
For millennia we have built our societies on stories, with far reaching effects. Think of the enduring messages from Greek tragedy and epic that continue to resonate in contemporary psychological theory. Fiction holds up a mirror to society but it is also asks questions about what it is to be human and sets patterns by which we find ourselves living. In privileging male stories, albeit unconsciously, we are building a society that automatically puts men on top. But by undermining women in this subtle way we are denying ourselves the potential for a rich and diverse culture.
I believe that change occurs only when attitudes shift and it is just such an attitude shift that the WEP aim to instigate in with their policies. By aiming for, amongst other policies, gender balance in parliament, equal opportunities for girls in education, equal treatment of women in the media and an end to violence against women, then perhaps we can begin to explore new narratives with women at their heart on which to build a richer society.
elizabethfremantle.com @lizfremantle
Women’s Equality Party: https://womensequality.org.uk
Nicola Griffith’s Data study: http://nicolagriffith.com/2015/05/26/books-about-women-tend-not-to-win-awards/
6 comments:
Thought-provoking. As you say - can there really have been only one book with female protagonists worthy of inclusion in the shortlist? Thanks, Elizabeth.
The problem for historical novelists is that it's often harder to get at the reality of women's lives, particularly those who were illiterate. But this is not necessarily an insuperable obstacle, as there are dull things like wills and court statistics that can tell us quite a lot, as I found when I was researching 'Malefice'. I have just finished reading Amanda Vickery's 'The Gentleman's Daughter' - closely researched and fascinating.It knocks on the head, incidentally, the prized delusion that people didn't love their children so deeply when they might die in infancy; the diaries and letters she has scrutinised show that they did.
When I was at school, we were told that the history worth studying was that of politics, which excludes a lot of women, though some women were involved in politics, something, incidentally, which 'Wolf Hall' does portray. If Cromwell is the main character, Anne Boleyn is vitally important, and also closely observed, though through his eyes. One can't accuse Mantel of neglecting the female characters at all, in fact. There's a whole cast of fascinating and brilliantly realised women in the novel.
However, my father gave me a corrective to this idea of political history being the only important one, by presenting me with Trevelyan's 'Social History of England.' I learned from this that history is the story of ordinary unglamorous people and this has stayed with me ever since.
I do agree about the sidelining of woman writers, and even worse is the way in which looksism has crept in nowadays. I wish we could get away from this, as a book is a good book regardless of the looks of the author. George Eliot might well have been downgraded nowadays, since she was so ugly.
Thanks for this!
Well, yes obviously, but a major problem is the many who simply don't believe us. They assert we are already equal or more privileged than men, and if you point out something like the pay gap or awards or reviews being mainly of and by men, they will deny it exists (pay gap, despite the vivid demonstration of it in Hollywood) or will explain how that is women's own fault really and aren't we sorry we went on about feminism because look what we have wrought: the awards are proof that men really are better, because sexism no longer exists.
Well said, Elizabeth. I've been counting the male protagonists rather than authors on shortlists for some years now and it is very revealing. And while the mobilisation against feminism is very real (to address Janey's point) and perhaps most clearly shows its ugly, naked self in social media trolling, it's nothing new, merely a continuation of what has always been there. Our own battle is put so beautifully into perspective by the film.
Growing up as a political girl, I was constantly talked down to and patronised by men who couldn't stand me having opinions and felt threatened by them - and said things like "Look, dear..." as a clincher. Anti-feminism didn't ever go away and I don't think it ever will. Just at the moment, with this government, things are really bad for many women. As the child bearers, women will always be vulnerable to oppression and require on-going battle and vigilance to gain/protect our rights.
I totally agree with everything you say, Elizabeth. And those men who say women are already 'having it all' are referring to those women lucky enough to have beautiful faces and bodies. We only have to think of women who do not think only of their appearance, clothes or hairstyles and clothes as necessary to what they have to say or write- like Mary Beard. Do men comment on the physical attributes of David Starkey? No. It's irrelevant. It's their mind and opinions we listen to or disagree with. Why can't it be the same for women? We are better than that.
.I really like the content in this website, are all new things and new lesson for us this very increase knowledge becomes more widely,
pengobatan untuk sembuhkan mata glaukoma
Post a Comment