Sunday, November 10, 2019
Representation Of Wolves
Question : Compare and contrast the representations of wolves in Angela Carterââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"The Company of Wolvesâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Wolf Aliceâ⬠. How successful do Carterââ¬â¢s literary appropriations demythologise gender stereotypes.IntroductionIn The Bloody Chamber (1979), Angela Carterââ¬â¢s short stories took a particularly conservative genre and radically subverted it for feminist purposes, deconstructing and demythologizing gender stereotypes in a very creative manner. Fairy-tales were always a very traditionalist and patriarchal literary form, first recorded by aristocratic writers in the 17th and 18th Centuries as moralistic and cautionary stories for children.Politically, their agenda was the exact opposite of Carter, whose feminist views were forged in the new social movements of the 1960s and 1970s. Therefore, none of her female heroines follow these traditional gender roles of being passive victims or the sex objects of men. In ââ¬Å"Wolf Aliceâ⬠, the nameless female heroine was raised by wolves and was therefore on outcast in human society, unable to assume the passive and domestic gender roles expected of her, while in ââ¬Å"The Company of Wolvesâ⬠, the Little Red Riding Hood character is depicted as independent and fearless rather than a ââ¬Ëtypicalââ¬â¢ female victim of the werewolf.At the end of both stories, the females also voluntarily enter into relationships with the ââ¬Ëmonstersââ¬â¢, claiming control over their own sexuality in defiance of the traditional gender roles. Female characters like these could only exist in a modern feminist or post-feminist context, and stand out as extremely divergent from the norm in society. Body ââ¬Å"Wolf Aliceâ⬠incorporates some of the elements of Snow White, Alice in Wonderland and Beauty and the Beast. Carter was always interested in the ââ¬Å"ââ¬â¢beat-marriage stories of the original fairy-talesâ⬠, and to the elements of ââ¬Ëbeastlinessââ¬â¢ in all forms of sexuality (Makinen 1992).She was not simply portraying all males as beasts, rapists and monsters but rather making a more feminist statement that woman should take control over their sexual desires and ââ¬Å"re-appropriate it as part of themselvesâ⬠(Makinen 1992). Alice was raised by wolves and therefore could not speak, ran on all fours and preferred the night over day. In these characteristics, she retained all the ââ¬Å"instinctual nature of her foster familyâ⬠even after she has been sent to live with the nuns (Walker 77).As the nun-narrator explains ââ¬Å"nothing about her is human except that she is not a wolfâ⬠(Wolf Alice 119). She is not even aware that she casts a reflection in the mirror, but believes it is another person. After teaching her some limited skills for nine days, the nuns decide that she really cannot be transformed back into a human, so they send her to the Dukeââ¬â¢s castle. He is a nocturnal creature as well, who lives alone and feeds on the living and dead more like a ghoul than a werewolf or vampire.Alice performs domestic tasks for him, sweeping and making the bed, and ââ¬Å"knows no better than to do his choresâ⬠(Wolf-Alice 120). Only with her menstruation does she begin to awaken to the fact that she is a female, since she knew nothing about these matters and the nuns certainly did not explain sexuality to her. At this time, she also becomes aware that her breasts are getting larger and begins to wear the old, discarded gowns that belonged to the Dukeââ¬â¢s grandmother, although ââ¬Å"she could not run so fast on two legs in petticoatsâ⬠(Wolf Alice 124).After the Duke is injured during one of his nighttime forays, she begins to kiss his wound and thus transforms him back into a human ââ¬Å"as if brought into being by her soft, moist, gentle tongueâ⬠(Wolf Alice 126). In ââ¬Å"The Company of Wolvesâ⬠, Carter subverts the ââ¬Å"Little Red Riding Hoodâ⬠tale b y having the female hero willingly join in a sexual relationship with the werewolf. In the traditional versions of the story, of course, the monster is killed by the heroic male hunter, and as Carter describes the legends being circulated in the village, this was the normal fate of werewolves.In Carterââ¬â¢s alternative reality, though, the heroine becomes a ââ¬Å"partner in seductionâ⬠(Walker 77). Even before she met the werewolf, she was slowly awakening to her sexuality and her ââ¬Å"breasts had just begun to swellâ⬠(Company of Wolves 113). She had heard all the stories about werewolves from the villagers and the dangers of walking alone in the forest, but ââ¬Å"she has her knife and is afraid of nothingâ⬠(Company of Wolves 113). To be sure, the werewolf is also described as young, handsome and seductive, so much so the even the grandmother notices his unusually large penis just before he kills and eatsà her.Carter was well-aware of the mixture of sexual ity and violence in this creature, and writes that the ââ¬Å"last thing the old lady saw in all the world was a young man, eyes like cinders, naked as a stone, approaching her bedâ⬠(Company of Wolves 117). When Little Red Riding Hood enters the cottage, they engage in the expected dialogue about his big eyes and teeth, but she was not a passive victim and laughed at his threats, knowing that ââ¬Å"she was nobodyââ¬â¢s meatâ⬠(Company of Wolves 118).At the very end of the story, she goes to sleep ââ¬Å"between the tender paws of the wolfâ⬠that has just devoured Granny (Company of Wolves 118). Conclusion In ââ¬Å"Wolf Aliceâ⬠and ââ¬Å"The Company of Wolvesâ⬠, Angela Carter completely subverted and revised the traditional female stereotypes and gender roles, making her women characters courageous, autonomous and sexually aware. Not all of her leftist and feminist critics agreed with this, however.She was also so frank in her depiction of raw female p ower and sexuality that in in 1987, the New Socialist asserted that Carter was ââ¬Å"the high-priestess of post-graduate pornâ⬠(Makinen 1992). Patricia Duncker. Aneis Lewellan and other feminist scholars thought that she had been unable to revise the ââ¬Å"conservative formâ⬠of fairy-tales and turn them into feminist literature (Makinen 1992). On the other hand, Charley Baker was correct in arguing that Carter was always exploring ââ¬Å"ways in which women can retain control and defy the systems of oppression that attempt to place them in the role of passive victimâ⬠(Baker 76).Similarly, Charlotte Crafts found that Carterââ¬â¢s intention was to ââ¬Å"deconstruct myths about femininity contained within the talesâ⬠and challenge the ââ¬Å"patriarchal structures of fairy-tale from withinâ⬠(Crafts 54-55). Wolf Alice and Little Red Riding Hood were fully autonomous and independent women, who behaved in ways that not even the monsters could have expect ed. Contrary to traditional gender roles and stereotypes they were never passive victim and sexual objects, but instead chose to become involved in relationships with the creatures.To put it mildly, these would most definitely not have been considered appropriate actions for women in the traditional fairy-tales, and both of Carterââ¬â¢s female characters stand completely apart from ââ¬Ëconventionalââ¬â¢ society for that reason. From a political viewpoint, such a recasting of this ultra-conservative and patriarchal genre would only have been possible in feminist era in which liberated and powerful female heroines actually became conceivable for the first time in history.
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