Author:
Alexander Howard
(MENAFN- The Conversation) In our feminist classics series, we look at influential books.
Social constructs and questions of control are preoccupations the late British writer Angela Carter returns to time and time again. This is especially true of the inflammatory piece of feminist non-fiction Carter published in 1979: The Sadeian Woman: And the Ideology of Pornography .
Carter, who died from cancer in 1992, was a true creative trailblazer. A novelist, fabulist, journalist and editor, deeply influenced by the women's movement of the 1960s, she played with genres from fairy-tales and science fiction to magic realism and radio drama. She is known for works such as The Bloody Chamber (1979) and Wise Children (1991).
English novelist Angela Carter. Photo by Sophie Bassouls Sygma via Getty Images Her work is eerily prescient and continues to resonate. The Passion of New Eve (1977), for instance, is a transgressive feminist novel set in a post-apocalyptic United States. Tellingly, Carter described this novel as an“anti-mythic” work about“the social creation of femininity”.
Two years later, she published her take on the French writer the Marquis de Sade (1740-1814). Commissioned by the feminist publishing house, Virago , The Sadeian Woman attempts the near impossible, claiming Sade as a proto-feminist author.
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Fact from fiction
Novelist Francine du Plessix Gray has described Sade (whose real name was Donatien Alphonse François) as“one of the few men in history whose names have spawned adjectives” and“the only writer who will never lose his capacity to shock us.”
But who was he? Carter's introductory note to The Sadeian Woman is useful:
Yet Carter neglects to mention Sade is one of the most notorious writers in recorded history.
Insane pornographer. Sexual pervert. Woman beater. Child rapist. Murderer. As the professor of French literature John Phillips has observed, these are“some of the more lurid labels” that have been attached – sometimes erroneously – to Sade over the last two centuries.
Goodreads Sade is the author of 120 Days of Sodom amongst other works, a novel so repellent that, in the words of the philosopher and pornographer George Bataille , one cannot finish it“without feeling sick”. Two of Sade's other major novels were Justine, or, The Misfortunes of Virtue (which describes the sexual brutalising of a 12-year-old virgin) and Juliette, or, The Prosperities of Vice , chronicling the adventures of Justine's libertine older sister.
The shocking nature of Sade's writing causes problems, especially because readers have difficulty distinguishing fact from fiction when it comes to him.
Sade was responsible for unquestionably abhorrent criminal behaviour in his personal life, such as when he kidnapped and abused Rose Keller , a 36-year-old beggar woman. He was found guilty of rape, sodomy and torture in the case of Keller. Once released, he went on to commit a series of other crimes. For these offences, Sade spent decades in prisons or insane asylums.
Sade started writing while incarcerated. His brutally deterministic fictional universe is one where, in his own words ,
Unpalatable as this may be, it is hard to ignore Sade. He has inspired artists and thinkers such as writers Gustave Flaubert, André Breton and Michel Foucault, film-maker Pier Paolo Pasolini and the feminist philosopher Simone du Beauvoir. The latter reasoned
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Angela Carter, who knew her Beauvoir, advances a similar argument in The Sadiean Woman. Carter's interest in Sade dates back to the beginning of the 1970s, when she contemplated writing a PhD entitled“De Sade: Culmination of the Enlightenment”.
Although that project never eventuated, Sade's influence is evident in Carter's 1972 book The Infernal Desire Machines of Dr Hoffman . This picaresque novel, in part concerned with abuses of sexual power, quotes from Sade and includes a carnally obsessed character – a“demonic intellectual” called The Count – who behaves like him.
Identities defined by men
Carter started The Sadeian Woman soon after she finished with Dr Hoffman. As she states plainly in the introduction:
Carter holds that Sade's pornography raises important questions about“the culturally determined nature of women” in society. Her central argument hinges on readings of two of Sade's major novels.
Justine, or, The Misfortunes of Virtue was published in 1791. Set in the years before the French Revolution, it tells the story of a 12-year-old female orphan endowed with, in Sade's phrasing,“a tenderness and a surprising sensitivity.”
Justine has
An altogether“charming” and innocent heroine, she is also fundamentally decent. Justine's virtuousness is steadfast. For this, Sade spends hundreds of pages brutalising his protagonist.
Carter highlights this in her reading of the novel:
Goodreads Carter is repulsed by the horrors inflicted upon Justine. At the same time, she has mixed feelings about Justine's martyrdom and her apparent passivity. She thinks Justine“a gratuitous victim. And if there is no virtue in her suffering, then there is none, it turns out, in her virtue itself; it does nobody any good, least of all herself.”
This idea is worth keeping in mind when it comes to Juliette, or, The Prosperities of Vice, which Sade worked on between 1797 and 1801.
Juliette is Justine's sister. A character“in possession of some wit and aptitude,” Juliette is an unrepentant libertine . She is, as author Joel Warner has put it,“as depraved as her sister is virtuous.”
Like her ignoble creator, Juliette is really only interested in one thing: the instant gratification of her own desires and demands. Carter understands this. She is alive to the fact that Juliette's life
Carter's point about structural inequality is easily grasped. Yet this is the moment when things start to heat up. Consider what Carter says next:
The unabashedly ambitious Juliette is happy to do this.“If Justine is a pawn because she is a woman,” Carter argues,“Juliette transforms herself from pawn to queen in a single move and henceforward goes wherever she pleases on the chess board.”
Goodreads Joining a secret society titled the Solality of the Friends of Crime, Juliette sets off across Europe. She moves in rarefied social circles and leaves a trail of chaos and destruction in her wake.
Theft. Sexual assault. Infanticide. The list of atrocities she is responsible for is as breathtaking as it is endless.
While their behaviours are different, it is important to recall that Carter sees Justine and Juliette as two sides of the same coin. She underscores that they“are women whose identities have been defined exclusively by men.”
Saying that, it is clear when it comes to the sisters, that Carter is infinitely more interested in Juliette:
Sex without reproduction
To be clear: Carter does not condone the suffering that Juliette inflicts upon the men, women, and children she encounters. Far from it. And she is highly critical of Juliette's rapaciousness when it comes to monetary matters.
Nevertheless, Carter remains intrigued by the“sheer force” of Juliette's will. She also writes favourably about the fact that Juliette“is never in less than full control” of her bodily autonomy.
Juliette has no interest in motherhood. In fact, she violently thumbs her nose in the direction of all things maternal. Carter reads this as a defiant and subversive gesture. Juliette, in Carter's reckoning, chooses“infertility as a way of life.”
This brings us to the crux of Carter's argument and explains her fondness for Sade. Carter, like Sade, refuses to define female sexuality in terms of reproductive functionality and fertility. She is, moreover, deeply suspicious of those who do.
Expanding the scope of her argument, Carter asserts that the
Carter reminds us that times have changed. Contraception and legalised access to abortion“have given women the choice to be sexually active yet intentionally infertile for more of their lives than was possible at any time in history until now.”
But Carter also appreciates that while times change, attitudes rarely keep pace. She grants that the reality of the situation doesn't
This helps us understand a central tenet of Carter's critique in The Sadeian Woman: the longstanding myths of femininity.
Indeed, as the novelist Lorna Sage explains , Carter does not take Sade at face value, rather she appropriates his work in order to explore the plight of women in a world that continues to be“authorised by patriarchy.”
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Critics and suppporters
Critics were divided by The Sadeian Woman when it hit the shelves.
Reviewing it in the Guardian alongside the first volume of Foucault's History of Sexuality , author and anthropologist Francis Huxley expressed gratitude to Carter. He thanked her for demonstrating that men could“free themselves from some habitual tyrannies and become human.”
Critic Richard Gilman didn't agree. In an article in the New York Times , he not only critiqued the book, but cast aspersions on Carter's character. While conceding that it contained“a number of shrewd insights,” Gilman maintained that The Sadeian Woman“is in the grip of an iron set of biases and dubious presuppositions.”
Furthermore, for all her“intelligence”, Carter was, for Gilman, nothing more than“a rigid ideologue, fervidly feminist, furiously anti-religious and against transcendence of any kind.”
Ironies abound here. While Gilman was castigating Carter for being too“rigid” in her feminist commitments, she was simultaneously being attacked in certain feminist circles for effectively betraying the women's movement.
To take a high-profile example, The Sadeian Woman attracted the ire of writer Andrea Dworkin , who summarily dismissed it as a“pseudofeminist” tract.
Read more: Andrea Dworkin's Intercourse: the raw, radical critique of male power resonating with Gen Z feminists today
Part of the problem, it seems, had less to do with Sade, and more to do with Carter's willingness to engage with pornography in broader terms.
Anti-pornography campaigners of Dworkin's militant ilk were always going to struggle with Carter's treatise, which suggests, provocatively, that certain forms of pornography might serve a positive political function,“as a critique of current relations between the sexes.”
Still, The Sadeian Woman has had some notable supporters over the years. The novelist Margaret Atwood , for one, praises Carter's book for its“suavity, wit, no-holds-barred intelligence, panache, bravado, stiletto-like epigrams, and sudden disconcerting pounces.”
Margaret Atwood, pictured here in 2019, is a fan of Carter's book. Alastair Grant/AAP Ultimately, it is up to the contemporary reader to decide whether they find Carter's arguments about Sade, pornography, and the myths of femininity convincing.
In any case, I find myself pondering what Carter, who writes in The Sadeian Woman of living in an“unfree society,” would have made of our present – and porn-saturated – moment. It is a time when the human rights for which she and other second-wave feminists fought are increasingly under threat .
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