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A Room of One’s Own Between  “The Angel of the House”… and “ The Madwoman in the Attic ” Mª Yolanda Galván González
“ The Angel of the House” The " Angel in the House " is the title of a popular poem by Coventry Patmore, in which he holds his angel-wife up as a model for all women: devoted and submissive to her husband, passive and powerless, meek, charming, graceful, sympathetic, self-sacrificing, pious, and above all: pure.  Though not very popular when first published in 1854, it became increasingly influential through the nineteenth and twentieth century.  Initially this ideal expressed the values of the middle classes. However, with Queen Victoria's devoting herself to her husband Prince Albert and to a domestic life, the ideal spread throughout nineteenth century society.  For Virginia Woolf, the repressive ideal of women represented by the “ Angel in the House ” was still so potent that in “Professions for Women”(1931) she wrote: "Killing the  Angel in the House was part of the occupation of a woman writer ."
“ The  Madwoman  in the Attic ” Countering Bloom’s masculinist “anxiety of influence”, their “anxiety of authorship” is  an isolation that felt like illness, an alienation that felt like madness as women writers of the 19th century wrote in defiance of the social injunction that writing wasn’t a woman’s work. A fear that she cannot create, that because she cannot become a precursor, writing can destroy/isolate her.  Diseases common among women in male-dominated, misogynistic society include: agoraphobia, anorexia, bulimia, claustrophobia, hysteria, and madness in general, and they recur in the images, themes, and characters of women’s literature. “ The Madwoman in the Attic”  is a reference to Bertha, Rochester’s hidden first wife. She stands for everything the woman writer must try to repress to write books acceptable by male standards. It focuses on the psychic cost of repression and on bodily symptoms resulting from that societal oppression. The woman who speaks out is branded an “active monster”, the woman that remains silent risks madness.  Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar attended to the strategies women had adopted to survive in a male dominated society. In “ The Madwoman in the Attic ”, Gilbert & Gubar postulated that  19th women writers had to negotiate alienation and psychological disease to attain literary authority, which they achieved by reclaiming the heritage of female creativity, remembering their lost foremothers, and refusing the debilitating cultural roles of “angel” and “monster” assigned to them by patriarchal society.
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In  chapter three  she shows the contrast between the constant presence of women as characters in the fiction written by men and their exclusion as writers. To explain why women didn’t have the access to the literary world,  she introduces a fictional sister of Shakespeare and compares the difficulties met by both of them, equally gifted, when trying to be writers. Judith and William represented the heads and tails of the coin.
”… any woman born   with a great gift in the sixteenth century would certainly gone crazed, shot herself, or ended her days in some lonely cottage outside a village, half witch, half wizard, feared and mocked at.”  She concluded.
In chapter four  she states the need of  tradition , apart from  social recognition  and  material conditions , to learn the craft and master it. She considers women lack the necessary background. She analyses the works of women writers such as Charlotte Brönte or Jane Austen and advices women to write  without anger . She prefers Austen to Brönte because she was free from anger. She affirms that women prefer novel because it is a new genre, more suitable for them than the traditional genres used by men.
In  chapter five  she explores a language suitable for women. Mary Carmichael will have to find a language that has never been used before. Women mustn’t write like men, neither in theme nor in form.  Time  and  experimentation  is needed as well as  tradition  and  reading  works written by other women. She exhorts women to “ think back through our mothers ” and to express experience “ as a woman ”. “ A woman’s writing is always feminine,…the only difficulty lies in defining what we mean by feminine .”
In the  last chapter , she introduces one of the most shocking ideas: the  ideal state of mind  to produce art is an  androgynous  one. She rejects determinism and she insists that  men and women have a two faced mind, with a masculine and a feminine part, and both must be involved in the creative process if we want to create a lasting work of art .
Woolf tries to demonstrate through all the essay that  money  and  space  are intrinsically linked to fictional writing, and in the last chapter she quotes  The Art of Writing , by Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch in which the author demonstrates that poor poets don’t have a dog’s chance. Intellectual freedom depends on material things and poetry upon intellectual freedom. And women have always been poor and had no freedom at all.

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A Room of One's Own

  • 1. A Room of One’s Own Between “The Angel of the House”… and “ The Madwoman in the Attic ” Mª Yolanda Galván González
  • 2. “ The Angel of the House” The " Angel in the House " is the title of a popular poem by Coventry Patmore, in which he holds his angel-wife up as a model for all women: devoted and submissive to her husband, passive and powerless, meek, charming, graceful, sympathetic, self-sacrificing, pious, and above all: pure. Though not very popular when first published in 1854, it became increasingly influential through the nineteenth and twentieth century. Initially this ideal expressed the values of the middle classes. However, with Queen Victoria's devoting herself to her husband Prince Albert and to a domestic life, the ideal spread throughout nineteenth century society. For Virginia Woolf, the repressive ideal of women represented by the “ Angel in the House ” was still so potent that in “Professions for Women”(1931) she wrote: "Killing the Angel in the House was part of the occupation of a woman writer ."
  • 3. “ The Madwoman in the Attic ” Countering Bloom’s masculinist “anxiety of influence”, their “anxiety of authorship” is an isolation that felt like illness, an alienation that felt like madness as women writers of the 19th century wrote in defiance of the social injunction that writing wasn’t a woman’s work. A fear that she cannot create, that because she cannot become a precursor, writing can destroy/isolate her. Diseases common among women in male-dominated, misogynistic society include: agoraphobia, anorexia, bulimia, claustrophobia, hysteria, and madness in general, and they recur in the images, themes, and characters of women’s literature. “ The Madwoman in the Attic” is a reference to Bertha, Rochester’s hidden first wife. She stands for everything the woman writer must try to repress to write books acceptable by male standards. It focuses on the psychic cost of repression and on bodily symptoms resulting from that societal oppression. The woman who speaks out is branded an “active monster”, the woman that remains silent risks madness. Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar attended to the strategies women had adopted to survive in a male dominated society. In “ The Madwoman in the Attic ”, Gilbert & Gubar postulated that 19th women writers had to negotiate alienation and psychological disease to attain literary authority, which they achieved by reclaiming the heritage of female creativity, remembering their lost foremothers, and refusing the debilitating cultural roles of “angel” and “monster” assigned to them by patriarchal society.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10. In chapter three she shows the contrast between the constant presence of women as characters in the fiction written by men and their exclusion as writers. To explain why women didn’t have the access to the literary world, she introduces a fictional sister of Shakespeare and compares the difficulties met by both of them, equally gifted, when trying to be writers. Judith and William represented the heads and tails of the coin.
  • 11. ”… any woman born with a great gift in the sixteenth century would certainly gone crazed, shot herself, or ended her days in some lonely cottage outside a village, half witch, half wizard, feared and mocked at.” She concluded.
  • 12. In chapter four she states the need of tradition , apart from social recognition and material conditions , to learn the craft and master it. She considers women lack the necessary background. She analyses the works of women writers such as Charlotte Brönte or Jane Austen and advices women to write without anger . She prefers Austen to Brönte because she was free from anger. She affirms that women prefer novel because it is a new genre, more suitable for them than the traditional genres used by men.
  • 13. In chapter five she explores a language suitable for women. Mary Carmichael will have to find a language that has never been used before. Women mustn’t write like men, neither in theme nor in form. Time and experimentation is needed as well as tradition and reading works written by other women. She exhorts women to “ think back through our mothers ” and to express experience “ as a woman ”. “ A woman’s writing is always feminine,…the only difficulty lies in defining what we mean by feminine .”
  • 14. In the last chapter , she introduces one of the most shocking ideas: the ideal state of mind to produce art is an androgynous one. She rejects determinism and she insists that men and women have a two faced mind, with a masculine and a feminine part, and both must be involved in the creative process if we want to create a lasting work of art .
  • 15. Woolf tries to demonstrate through all the essay that money and space are intrinsically linked to fictional writing, and in the last chapter she quotes The Art of Writing , by Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch in which the author demonstrates that poor poets don’t have a dog’s chance. Intellectual freedom depends on material things and poetry upon intellectual freedom. And women have always been poor and had no freedom at all.