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	<title>The Heretic Loremaster &#187; feminist fiction</title>
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	<description>Skeptical Readings of Literature and History</description>
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		<title>&#8220;He gave me nothing but a name, and I have filled it with myself&#8221;: LeGuin&#8217;s Lavinia Reviewed</title>
		<link>http://themidhavens.net/heretic_loremaster/2009/10/lavinia-reviewed/</link>
		<comments>http://themidhavens.net/heretic_loremaster/2009/10/lavinia-reviewed/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Oct 2009 00:36:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dawn</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Literature]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[aeneid]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fantasy fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[feminist fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gender issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[historical fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[myths as stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[revisionist literature]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ursula k leguin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[virgil]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[women in literature]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://themidhavens.net/heretic_loremaster/?p=58</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One theory of fantasy literature that has always appealed to me is the idea that because fantasy fiction permits stories to occur at a remove from what we understand as &#8220;reality,&#8221; then fantasy literature can begin to heal inequities that continue to plague the real world and, therefore, must be present in any literature representing [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One theory of fantasy literature that has always appealed to me is the idea that because fantasy fiction permits stories to occur at a remove from what we understand as &#8220;reality,&#8221; then fantasy literature can begin to heal inequities that continue to plague the real world and, therefore, must be present in any literature representing that world. From a feminist perspective, female characters in fantasy fiction need not be bound by or defined by gender discrimination, stereotypes, or misogynism, all of which have peppered our human history and continue to manifest, at least to a degree, even today. Fantasy literature, then, is the perfect medium for asking questions about women&#8217;s potential and influence on the world; the perfect medium to show strong female characters untainted by gender bias.</p>
<p>The premise of LeGuin&#8217;s <em>Lavinia</em> is to depict events from Virgil&#8217;s <em>Aeneid</em> from the point of view of Aeneas&#8217;s wife, Lavinia. Lavinia is named in the original poem but she doesn&#8217;t speak a single line; LeGuin has given her not only a voice but regard worthy of being the point-of-view character.</p>
<p><em>Lavinia,</em> then, is a perfect model of how fantasy literature can give life and strength to the women that it depicts. Because it concerns an ancient culture of our world, <em>Lavinia</em> is, of course, bound more by reality than fantasy novels that occur at a complete remove from our own world.  LeGuin is bound somewhat by what is known of early Latin history and by the &#8220;canon&#8221; of the <em>Aeneid.</em> That she takes liberties in breaking with both, when the story (or Lavinia herself) demands it, makes me think of the novel more as fantasy rather than historical fiction, though it is flavored by both.</p>
<p>I would love to say that I was delighted with <em>Lavinia</em>, that I couldn&#8217;t put it down, that it represents a zenith of feminist fantasy fiction. Honestly, though, there were times when I was more overcome with my disappointment with the book, when I couldn&#8217;t help but to regard it as opportunity squandered. As I finished the novel today and thought on it more while in the comfortably silent company of my herbs and vegetable plants, though, I realized that it is still an important novel, if even if did fall shy of the mark in many regards.</p>
<p><em>Lavinia</em> is a relatively short book for the subject and time period that it covers. The hardcover Harcourt edition that I borrowed from the library checks in at 279 pages, including LeGuin&#8217;s afterword. Typical for LeGuin, there were passages wrought with breathtaking skill and the introspection was beautifully handled and never ponderous; her characters achieve a delicate elevation in worth yet remain grounded, believable as human beings. The short length of the novel should, one would think, make for an intense plot, but the opposite often seemed to be the case. I found myself baffled as page after page was spent summarizing action going on off-screen: battles fought and treaties made, harvests brought in and journeys embarked upon; LeGuin opens the novel with a map, but we are privileged to see inside only three of its cities, although many more are discussed. Surely LeGuin, I thought, who is quite possibly the greatest living fantasist, doesn&#8217;t need to be told that cardinal rule of writing: show don&#8217;t tell. Yet so much of the novel does <em>tell,</em> through second- and third-hand news coming to Lavinia, what is happening in the world that the plot drags and I found myself sighing with relief for an clip of dialogue to relieve the endless parade of off-screen places and people.</p>
<p>The more I thought about it, though, the more I realized that this was less a failure of plotting and more a failing of point-of-view. The novel is told from Lavinia&#8217;s point of view, so we see what she sees. And she is a woman in ancient Latium; she does not go to battle or even leave her home city for more than a few days at a time, being as her sacred duty is the upkeep of her household. Although a handful of scenes in a dream world where Lavinia converses with &#8220;her poet&#8221; Virgil give more intimate insights into the world beyond her own, we as readers are largely confined to the &#8220;women&#8217;s side&#8221; right alongside Lavinia, at most getting a glimpse of battle from a rooftop.</p>
<p>Of course, this doesn&#8217;t make those sections of the book any more effective because they are hampered by PoV rather than poor plotting. But it does, I think, reveal something interesting about literature in general and about us as readers and the expectations that we bring to stories.</p>
<p>Here is a question worth considering: Why must we hear about the battles at all? We are in a woman&#8217;s PoV, and if she does not ride out to battle, then why should battles (and other political maneuvers) be given anything more than cursory attention? Well, of course, the canon demands it; the <em>Aeneid</em> discusses those battles and events and so they form the fictional backdrop for LeGuin&#8217;s story as well. Is it possible, too, that we&#8217;ve come to expect it? That we&#8217;ve come to regard those battles and political maneuvers&#8211;the work of <em>men,</em> not women, in ancient Latium&#8211;as the meat of such a story? In fact, <em>Lavinia</em> is surprisingly devoid of details about Lavinia&#8217;s life and work <em>as a woman</em> in her world. While we do learn of her religious rituals and her expectations (and fears) concerning the life she faces and her political role and her stewardship of the household, I couldn&#8217;t help but to wish that more of those passages devoted to summarizing the doings of men outside of Lavinia&#8217;s sphere could have been devoted to <em>her</em> life instead.</p>
<p>But, of course, this puts LeGuin in a difficult situation. Lavinia&#8217;s character is knowledgeable about the world around her; she is trusted worthy of learning and contributing to both her father and husband&#8217;s reigns, and so the focus on the work of men like her father and her husband also proves her competence, her abilities beyond being a good wife, mother, and housekeeper. But, here, we fall into the trap of defining worthiness from a masculine perspective. Why should Lavinia&#8217;s work for her household and her people be any less worthy? I felt like LeGuin was seesawing between wanting to show Lavinia as possessing traditional competence&#8211;knowledge of the world around her, of politics, of how to get what she wanted from other people&#8211;and wanting to show the feminine contributions to that sort of life. In the latter regard, LeGuin did a good job of showing how the women in Latium were often the silent, unacknowledged backbone of the Latin people: those who provided comfort, healing, sustenance, and foresight enough to see beyond a single day&#8217;s battle to the deeper future. I just wish that there could have been more of it, and that LeGuin could have embraced tighter the worth of Lavinia&#8217;s contributions in these areas rather than attempting to define her competence in masculine terms.</p>
<p>Still, this represents also a shortcoming of our own perceptions concerning competence and worth. We&#8217;ve still not reached the point where &#8220;the work of small hands&#8221; (to borrow the title of one of my own stories that attempted to show how the quiet, unacknowledged influence of a woman saved her people) is appreciated the way that prowess in battle and agility in politics are. In a way, this conundrum parallels closely a conversation between Aeneas and his war-mongering son Ascanius:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;If you are to rule Latium after me &#8230; I want to know that you&#8217;ll learn how to govern, not merely to make war, that you&#8217;ll learn to ask the powers of the earth and sky for guidance for yourself and your people, that you&#8217;ll learn to seek your manhood on a greater field than the battlefield. Tell me that you will learn those things, Ascanius.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>This wisdom, gentle guidance, and piety are feminine traits: They are Lavinia. If only the story could have honed closer to Aeneas&#8217;s own ideals for his kingship and that of his son, they too could have been <em>Lavinia.</em></p>
<p>But, as noted, these are hurdles that we are only learning to overcome in trying to depict strong women and show positively femininity in a world that traditionally has and a society that continues to view those traits as signs of weakness. I applaud LeGuin for aiming high in her novel and making a strong attempt to accomplish these goals and, at times, doing so. I give <em>Lavinia</em> 2.75 E.L. Fudge &#8220;Elves Exist&#8221; cookies out four.</p>
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		<title>The Mists of Avalon Reviewed</title>
		<link>http://themidhavens.net/heretic_loremaster/2009/05/the-mists-of-avalon-reviewed/</link>
		<comments>http://themidhavens.net/heretic_loremaster/2009/05/the-mists-of-avalon-reviewed/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2009 01:22:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dawn</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Literature]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[arthurian legends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fantasy fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[feminist fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gender issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marion zimmer bradley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mists of avalon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[religion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[revisionist literature]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[women in literature]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://themidhavens.net/heretic_loremaster/?p=28</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Marion Zimmer Bradley&#8217;s The Mists of Avalon has been on my reading list for some time now, ever since my husband and I rented the television mini-series last year. A few months ago, as part of my course on women writers, I wrote a term paper on the idea that the fantasy genre is a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.themidhavens.net/images/heretic_loremaster/mists-of-avalon.jpg" alt="The Mists of Avalon" align="right" margin="5" />Marion Zimmer Bradley&#8217;s <em>The Mists of Avalon</em> has been on my reading list for some time now, ever since my husband and I rented the television mini-series last year. A few months ago, as part of my course on women writers, I wrote a term paper on the idea that the fantasy genre is a perfect vehicle for promoting gender equality. <em>Mists</em> was one of the novels that was consistently mentioned and highly regarded as an example of the genre serving a feminist purpose, rocketing it to the top of my reading list.</p>
<p><em>Mists</em> joins a tradition of exploring the Arthurian legends, a tradition that includes hundreds of works and spans centuries, but differs from the vast majority of these treatments in that its concerns with the cultural mainstays like King Arthur and Sir Lancelet are secondary to the women of the legends. The story centers itself on the life of Morgaine, Arthur&#8217;s half-sister and priestess of the isle of Avalon, where old magics hold sway amid an increasingly Christianized Britain. The lives of the other women in the Arthurian stories are also focal points of the story: Morgaine and Arthur&#8217;s biological mother Igraine, Morgaine&#8217;s foster-mother Viviane, Arthur&#8217;s wife and queen Gwynhyfar, Morgaine&#8217;s aunt Morgause, and Lancelet&#8217;s wife Elaine.</p>
<p>The unique perspective would not be nearly as notable if the Arthurian tradition didn&#8217;t have such a lengthy history of misogyny. In works dating from the medieval period to the present, the best a woman in an Arthurian tale can hope for is to be sidelined, to be a name in a text notable only for her marriage or mothering of an important male. Her unfortunate sisters are cast as villains prone to open malice or astounding weakness, particularly in matters of self-control and morality. In <a href="http://www.questia.com/read/9602576">The Reclamation of a Queen</a>, Barbara Ann Gordon-Wise traces the literary history of Gwynhyfar, perhaps the most maligned of Arthurian women. Gwynhyfar&#8217;s improper sexual desires serve to bring down her husband&#8217;s paradisial kingdom in many of the works in which she plays a part while her most frequent partner in crime&#8211;Lancelet, the most beloved of Arthur&#8217;s knights&#8211;tends to be regarded favorably, despite his illicit activities in the Queen&#8217;s bed. Her inability to provide Arthur with a son and an heir is also scorned by literary history for its weakening of Arthur&#8217;s kingdom. Saddled with the lowest of expectations&#8211;to be an obedient wife and provide a child to her husband&#8211;Gwynhyfar fails at both, and literature has judged&#8211;and continues to judge&#8211;her harshly for it.</p>
<p>Morgaine is generally a more active villain, with the fact that she bore a child to Arthur&#8211;her half-brother&#8211;usually used as proof of that. Despite the fact that it takes two to tango, Arthur&#8217;s role in that pregnancy tends to go unexamined or is excused by Morgaine&#8217;s skill in deception and trickery. Relying on a motif that goes back to the moment that Adam first bit into the apple, he is an innocent victim of the wiles of a woman. Their son Mordred goes on to destroy the peace that Arthur has so carefully wrought. Once again, the vile actions of a woman destroy the accomplishments of a man.</p>
<p>To say that women have been mistreated throughout the history of literature is to state the obvious, and bemoaning the lack of gender equality as it is reflected in the literature of medieval Europe is pointless. What is disturbing is the tenacity with which these negative depictions of women have held their places in literature and other forms of entertainment, despite their coming to light in a society that is supposedly moving toward gender equality. In this, fantasy literature holds its unique power for promoting the empowerment of women.</p>
<p>To write historical fiction or even fiction set in the modern day is to be constrained by gender expectations and inequalities that are represented in the interest of accurately depicting reality. I have had conversations with people who complain about stories masquerading as historical fiction that attempt to level the gender playing field by showing empowered women where, in all likelihood, there would have been none, or who portray cultures with much more progressive attitudes toward gender than they in fact had. I am forced to agree, even as I lament that harmful stereotypes of women must be thrust forth again and again in literature because of it. Herein, fantasy literature possesses a unique advantage. In its most elemental definition, fantasy literature changes an aspect of reality (without concern about the mechanism of that change, unlike science fiction) and follows that change through to its conclusion. Fantasy literature is perfect for exploring a world that is not constrained by inequality towards women or that&#8211;as with <em>Mists</em>&#8211;turns patriarchy on its head to show what a matrifocal civilization might look like. Throughout this, there is no need to &#8220;suspend disbelief&#8221; as one must when encountering the same ideas in most historical fiction or fiction set in the modern day.</p>
<p>I picked up <em>Mists</em> for my interest in it as a piece of feminist fantasy literature. However, I found its feminist cant secondary to and dependent upon its tendency to look critically upon organized religion. While there is no doubt that <em>Mists</em> is meant to criticize patriarchal institutions&#8211;the Christian church in its more conservative incarnation receives particularly scathing treatment&#8211;then I felt like it looked unfavorably on both the Christian and the pagan institutions shown in the novel. Although the critiques of Christianity were much more noticeable, the institutions of heathen Goddess worship of which Morgaine and Viviane are part are certainly far from glorified. To the contrary, <em>Mists</em> shows both faiths&#8211;Christian and pagan&#8211;to be uplifting, positive entities in their purest forms. When tethered to power, ambition, and moral certitude, however, both institutions wreak terrible harm.</p>
<p>Although the pagan faith shown in <em>Mists</em> is Goddess-centered and treats women as higher than men in its institutions and traditions, it certainly is not a pro-woman institution. Morgaine&#8217;s mother Igraine is the most shining example of a woman treated as a tool in order to advance her sisters in a male-driven world. Igraine is given in marriage to Gorlois&#8211;a Roman much older than she whom she detests and who treats her with disregard bordering on contempt&#8211;and she is given by her own sister Viviane, a priestess of Avalon who otherwise affirms the superiority of women. It is clear, though, that this does not include <em>all</em> women so much as it includes women in power. When it is to Viviane&#8217;s benefit, she is no better than Gwynhyfar&#8217;s father, who gives his daughter to Arthur in marriage as part of a parcel of horses; Igraine, likewise, is used to buy Avalon favor with the Romans. Deserted by her sisters, Igraine&#8217;s life becomes focused on pleasing men, and it is no surprise that she dies in a convent, scorning her own daughter Morgaine for her autonomy. In contrast, Lancelet and Gwydion (Mordred) are both connected to Avalon and the Lady of the Lake, and neither is used as a pawn quite in the way that Igraine (and, to a lesser extent, Morgause) are used.</p>
<p>Likewise, Morgaine&#8217;s treatment of Kevin the Bard at the end of the novel also shows the pagan institutions as comparably brutal as the Christian church. (Actually, at this point, they are probably more so, but the novel hints at the end of the growing fervor of the Christians that will, presumably, lead into the extreme fundamentalism that characterizes the Middle Ages and continues, to an extent, today.) Kevin is most guilty of <em>not</em> being a religious fundamentalist; his aim is to bring the two religions together as much as possible and to preserve the old ways in conjunction with the flourishing Christianity. To Morgaine and others with a fundamentalist bent, this is unacceptable. Morgaine&#8217;s brief embodiment as the Goddess at one of Arthur&#8217;s feasts demonstrates the potential of the Britons to receive the old powers, but her refusal to compromise threatens to drive the faith in its entirety into oblivion. When Kevin is discovered to have used the regalia of Avalon in conjunction with Christian ceremonies, he is decried as a traitor, and the original sentence is that he should be brought alive to Avalon (through the trickery of the priestess Nemue, who in the process of ensnaring him must also herself fall in love with him) and there flayed and shut alive inside of a tree.</p>
<p>Even as she herself hands down this sentence, Morgaine is tormented by doubts. For all that she despises Kevin&#8217;s actions, he has been her friend and lover, and she wants to do him no harm. When he is delivered into her hands, she makes the decision to grant him a quick death, even if it means that she herself must bear his punishment as a traitor to Avalon. Morgaine&#8217;s refusal to play a part in cruel malice is viewed&#8211;by her at least&#8211;as a weakness; she feels that she has failed in her duty to her Goddess. In despair at Kevin&#8217;s fate, Nemue commits suicide. Again, in pursuit of their aims, the machinations of the religious elite have led to the destruction of a woman.</p>
<p>Throughout the novel, Kevin&#8217;s sentence remains the most explicit example of such cruelty, though <em>Mists</em> hints that such &#8220;blood sacrifices&#8221; were once commonplace and that ordinary people (or criminals in their places) were expected to lay down their lives in rituals to ensure a good harvest or in homage to the Goddess. The elite and powerful were, of course, exempt, unless they were traitors, in which case they were subjected to the same cruelties that would become part and parcel of their religious successors, the Christians. This seems to show, again, the short-sightedness of religious institutions, no matter what name they use in worship, and the dehumanization to which they are inclined when they believe that larger spiritual matters require it. Mistreatment of women is a part of this.</p>
<p>So, in the end, what did I think of the book? It is not without flaws, in my opinion, but overall, I really, really enjoyed it. I felt that the feminist purposes were a little too explicit in places, borrowing too heavily from modern discourse common on this subject (particularly in the earlier sections of the book, when Igraine is growing accustomed to living in a patriarchy and often thinks like Gloria Steinem being made to live among the Amish) and would have liked had I felt less like I was being <em>told</em> what to feel about this rather than being <em>shown</em> Igraine&#8217;s life and permitted to draw my own conclusions. (Yes, the old adage &#8220;show don&#8217;t tell&#8221; rears its warty head!) Morgaine was constantly realizing that another character was &#8220;the only friend she&#8217;d ever had&#8221; or &#8220;the only one she&#8217;d ever loved,&#8221; which would have been fine except that I think she realized this, independently, of Kevin, Lancelet, Viviane, Gwynhyfar, and Arthur. Since I am prone to this sort of hyperbole and waffling over affections in my own fiction, it leaped out at me here. And the ending happened much too fast. Mordred becomes a delightfully wicked character, and I looked forward to his climactic scene with Arthur but &#8230; there wasn&#8217;t much there. His betrayal should have been so much more memorable given the skill with which Ms. Bradley constructs his character and installs him in the hearts of those in Arthur&#8217;s court. I felt like the book rushed much to fast to its conclusion. Maybe the copy I had from the library had pages missing? It did feel that way.</p>
<p>But, for the past month, there were times when I would want to forsake other activities and things that needed to be done in order to read this book. It is not only an ingenious rendering of one of the most familiar tales in Western mythology but also highly entertaining. I give it 3.75 E.L. Fudge &#8220;Elves Exist&#8221; cookies out of four.</p>
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