Showing posts with label Melissa A. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Melissa A. Show all posts

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Herland

What would a world without men be like?

Herland, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's feminist utopia, is based on this premise. Written in 1915, the book is about a trio of young men who hear of an uncharted territory where only women are allowed to enter. Searching for an adventure, they fly a plane into the territory and discover a world where the men died out two thousand years ago; the women evolved and have been self-reproducing only females ever since. The men are held captive until they can learn the women's language and gain their trust. Once trust is established, they are encouraged to observe the way of life in Herland.

The country, populated by three million women, is the antithesis of all that symbolizes "civilized" society. It is a world where a woman's sole purpose in life is to be a mother. The country has had two thousand years to figure out what kind of quality of life it wants, and each generation throughout the two thousand years has made an effort to achieve that ideal.

The result is that each woman gives birth to only one child so that their small country does not become overpopulated. Plants and trees have been cultivated throughout the centuries to bear plentiful amounts of food. Crime is nonexistent, and methods to educate and entertain the children--whom everyone has a hand in raising--have been refined and tailored in ways that would best benefit them. Respect for all living things and a desire to create a better world for future generations is what drives the women. One of the characters explains to the men,

"Here we have Human Motherhood--in full working use...The children in this country are the one center and focus of all our thoughts. Every step of our advance is always considered in its effect on them--on the race. You see, we are Mothers," she repeated, as if in that she had said it all.
Feminist utopias are always fun to read, but what struck me most about this one was how ahead of its time it was, and how relevant it remains today. The author's commentary on the milk and meat industries could easily still be used in contemporary literature:
"Has the cow no child?" asked Somel earnestly.

"Oh, yes, of course, a calf, that is."

"Is there milk for the calf and you, too?"

It took some time to make clear to those sweet-faced women the process which robs the cow her calf, and the calf of its true food; and the talk led us into a further discussion of the meat business. They heard it out, looking very white, and presently begged to be excused.
I also found this book really interesting in contrast to "The Yellow Wallpaper," Charlotte Perkins Gilman's most famous short story, in which her protagonist, suffering from post-partum depression, slowly goes insane at the hands of her doctor's "treatments." Herland offers a completely different portrait of Perkins Gilman's views on motherhood.

My main gripe with the book is that I wish it hadn't ended so abruptly. There were also other aspects to the book that did make me cringe (i.e., population control involved the "undesirable elements" of society being barred from procreating). And of course, anyone who knows me well knows that a world in which a woman's sole purpose is motherhood is my idea of a dystopia rather than a utopia! ;)

But overall, this book is a pretty fascinating contribution to the feminist canon.

Cross-posted from The Feminist Texican [Reads].

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Melissa A's List

Hi everyone! I'm kinda late to the party, but when I heard about this challenge, I couldn't resist joining!

My list is made up of a variety of titles I’ve been meaning to read for years: books I’m ashamed I’ve never read even though I was an English major, women’s studies classics, animal rights classics, the Russians, books that have been sitting on my shelves forever. Several of the books coincide with my 1001 Books and Pulitzer projects. And, of course, what kind of feminist would I be if I didn’t strive for some gender equity? About half of the books on this list were written by women, and a number of them are written by people of color.

  1. Adams, Carol J. – The Pornography of Meat
  2. Adams, Douglas – The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
  3. Adichie, Chimamanda Ngozi – Half of a Yellow Sun
  4. Adiga, Aravind – The White Tiger
  5. Alcott, Louisa May – Little Women
  6. Alexie, Sherman – The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian
  7. Allende, Isabel – The House of the Spirits
  8. Alvarez, Julia – How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents
  9. Alvarez, Julia – In the Time of the Butterflies
  10. Angelou, Maya – I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
  11. Asimov, Isaac – I, Robot
  12. Atwood, Margaret – The Blind Assassin
  13. Atwood, Margaret – The Handmaid’s Tale
  14. Austen, Jane – Pride and Prejudice
  15. Bradbury, Ray – Fahrenheit 451
  16. Bronte, Emily – Wuthering Heights
  17. Buck, Pearl S. – The Good Earth
  18. Camus, Albert – The Stranger
  19. Capote, Truman – In Cold Blood
  20. Cervantes – Don Quixote
  21. Chabon, Michael – The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
  22. Chbosky, Stephen – The Perks of Being a Wallflower
  23. Chopin, Kate – The Awakening
  24. Cunningham, Michael – The Hours
  25. Danticat, Edwidge – Brother, I’m Dying
  26. de Beauvior, Simone – The Second Sex
  27. DeLillo, Don – Underworld
  28. Diamant, Anita – The Red Tent
  29. Diaz, Junot – Drown
  30. Dickens, Charles – A Tale of Two Cities
  31. Dostoevsky, Fyodor – Crime and Punishment
  32. Dostoevsky, Fyodor – The Brothers Karamazov
  33. Ellison, Ralph – Invisible Man
  34. Esquivel, Laura – Like Water for Chocolate
  35. Eugenides, Jeffrey – The Virgin Suicides
  36. Faludi, Susan – Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women
  37. Fitzgerald, F. Scott – The Great Gatsby
  38. Flaubert, Gustave – Madame Bovary
  39. Forster, E.M. – Maurice
  40. Frazier, Charles – Cold Mountain
  41. Friedan, Betty – The Feminine Mystique
  42. Gilman, Charlotte Perkins – Herland
  43. Gogol, Nikolai – Dead Souls
  44. Greer, Germaine – The Female Eunuch
  45. Heller, Joseph – Catch-22
  46. Hemingway, Ernest – For Whom the Bell Tolls
  47. Hesse, Herman – Siddhartha
  48. Hugo, Victor – The Hunchback of Notre Dame
  49. Hugo, Victor – Les Miserables
  50. Hurston, Zora Neale – Their Eyes Were Watching God
  51. Huxley, Aldous – Brave New World
  52. Ibsen, Henrik – A Doll’s House
  53. Jelinek, Elfriede – The Piano Teacher
  54. Kincaid, Jamaica – My Brother
  55. Kundera, Milan – The Unbearable Lightness of Being
  56. L’Engle, Madeleine – A Wrinkle in Time
  57. Larsen, Nella – Passing
  58. Lee, Harper – To Kill a Mockingbird
  59. Lewycka, Marina – A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian
  60. MacDonald, Anne-Marie – The Way the Crow Flies
  61. Martell, Yann – Life of Pi
  62. Marquez, Gabriel Garcia – Love in the Time of Cholera
  63. Marquez, Gabriel Garcia – One Hundred Years of Solitude
  64. Mistry, Rohinton – A Fine Balance
  65. Morrison, Toni – Beloved
  66. Morrison, Toni – Song of Solomon
  67. Murdoch, Iris – The Sea, The Sea
  68. Nabokov, Vladimir – Lolita
  69. Nemirovsky, Irene – Suite Francaise
  70. Oates, Joyce Carol – Blonde
  71. Ovid – Metamorphoses
  72. Pamuk, Orhan – Snow
  73. Paz, Octavio – The Labyrinth of Solitude
  74. Roth, Philip – American Pastoral
  75. Rushdie, Salman – The Satanic Verses
  76. Salinger, J.D. – Catcher in the Rye
  77. Saramago, Jose – Blindness
  78. Schlosser, Eric – Reefer Madness
  79. Shelley, Mary – Frankenstein
  80. Sinclair, Upton – The Jungle
  81. Singer, Peter – Animal Liberation
  82. Smith, Zadie – On Beauty
  83. Smith, Zadie – White Teeth
  84. Steinbeck, John – East of Eden
  85. Steinbeck, John – The Grapes of Wrath
  86. Steinbeck, John – Of Mice and Men
  87. Stoker, Bram – Dracula
  88. Tan, Amy – The Joy Luck Club
  89. Tolkien, J.R.R. – The Lord of the Rings
  90. Tolstoy, Leo – Anna Karenina
  91. Tolstoy, Leo – War and Peace
  92. Toole, John Kennedy – Confederacy of Dunces
  93. Urrea, Luis Alberto – The Devil’s Highway
  94. Vonnegut Jr., Kurt – Slaughterhouse Five
  95. Wilde, Oscar – The Picture of Dorian Gray
  96. Wolf, Naomi – The Beauty Myth
  97. Wollstonecraft, Mary – A Vindication on the Rights of Women
  98. Woolf, Virginia – To the Lighthouse
  99. Wright, Richard – Native Son
  100. Zusak, Mark – The Book Thief