BY NASRULLAH MAMBROL on OCTOBER 7, 2022
Feminist literary criticism has its origins in the intellectual and political feminist movement. It advocates a critique of maledominated language and performs ¡°resistant¡± readings of literary texts or histories. Based on the premise that social systems are patriarchal¡ªorganized to privilege men¡ªit seeks to trace how such power relations in society are reflected, supported, or questioned by literary texts and expression.
One of the founders of this kind of approach was Virginia Woolf, who showed in her 1929 essay A Room of One¡¯s Own how women¡¯s material and intellectual deprivation were obstacles to authorship. Woolf illustrated her case with the abortive artistic aspirations of Shakespeare¡¯s fictitious sister Judith. In another essay, ¡°Professions for Women,¡± Woolf also announced the necessity for women writers to kill the ¡°angel in the house,¡± taking her cue from Coventry Patmore¡¯s mid-Victorian poem of the same name that glorified a domestic (or domesticated) femininity devoid of any critical spirit.
Another important source of inspiration has been Simone de Beauvoir¡¯s 1949 The Second Sex. Here de Beauvoir wrote that ¡°one is not born a woman, one becomes one.¡± De Beauvoir¡¯s point behind her muchquoted comment was that ¡° ¡®woman¡¯ is a cultural construction, rather than a biological one.¡± As Ruth Robbins notes, this remark is important because it highlights the fact that ¡°the ideas about male and female roles which any given society may have come to regard as natural are not really so and that given that they are not natural they may even be changed¡± (118). All three texts provided ammunition for the women¡¯s liberation movement of the 1960s and 1970s and are useful starting points for discussions of short stories that take women and the feminine as central concerns.
The ensuing critical response may best be described as bifurcating into an Anglo-American and a French strand. The former was defined by the greater importance British feminists such as Sheila Rowbotham, Germaine Greer, and Mich¨¨le Barrett attached to class. Literary critics working in this school were interested in representations of women in literary texts, an approach most famously encapsulated in Kate Millett¡¯s Sexual Politics (1970)¡ªprobably the world¡¯s best-selling doctoral thesis. Groundbreaking as the book turned out to be in reading canonized authors (e.g., Charles Dickens, D. H. Lawrence) against the grain and in drawing attention to their suffocating (and often misogynist) representations of women, it was also criticized for its insistence on a male conspiracy. There were objections that its readings were too often based on the assumption that literature simply mirrors reality.

Left, Susan Gubar. Right, Sandra M. Gilbert. | Left, Eli Setiya. Right, Peter Basmajian. Via Vox
Subsequent critics sought to redress the gaps in Millet¡¯s book by setting out to discover and reevaluate neglected female writing. Among those mapping this dark continent (in Sigmund Freud¡¯s trope) was Ellen Moers, whose Literary Women (1976) is often seen as pioneering in its attempts to focus on noncanonical women writers such as Mary Shelley. The book has since been criticized on account of its unqualified appraisal of ¡°heroinism,¡± an appraisal that leaves the concept of the ¡°great writer¡±¡ªa central category of male literary historiography¡ªintact. One of the terms used by Elaine Showalter in A Literature of Their Own (1977) is ¡°gynocriticism,¡± a term intended to indicate her concern with the history of women as authors. In A Literature of Their Own Showalter posited the idea of a ¡°feminine¡± period of literary history (1840¨C80) in which the experiences of women such as the Brontë