The Women's Room
The
Women's Room is the debut novel by American
feminist author Marilyn French,
published in 1977. It launched French as a major participant in the feminist
movement and,[1]
while French states it is not autobiographical, the book reflects many
autobiographical elements.[2] For example, French, like the main character, Mira, was
married and divorced, and then attended Harvard where she obtained a Ph.D. in
English Literature.[2] Despite the connection of The Women's Room to the
feminist movement, French stated in a 1977 interview with The New York Times:
"The Women's Room" is not about the women's movement... but
about women's lives today."[3]
The
Women's Room has been described as one of the
most influential novels of the modern feminist movement.[4] Its instant popularity brought criticism from some
well-known feminists that it was too pessimistic about women's lives and too
anti-men.[5]
The
Women's Room is set in 1950s America and follows
the fortunes of Mira Ward, a conventional and submissive young woman in a
traditional marriage, and her gradual feminist awakening. The novel met stark media
criticism when published but went on to be an international best seller.
Historical context
The
Women's Room was published in 1977, but the
novel is written as a reflective work, following the main character, Mira, from
adolescence in the late 1940s to adulthood and independence in the 1960s.
Mira's
primary childbearing years were in the 1950s, during the Baby
Boom. Though she had only two children,
many of her friends throughout the novel had three or more.[6]
The
1950s was also a period in which American women were expected to be housewives, to prioritize their roles as wives and mothers before
anything else, and to dutifully serve their families and find happiness inside
their homes and marriages, rather than in a career.[7] Mira experiences this through her lack of a career during
her marriage to Norm and her determination to have a perfect household.[citation needed]
Second-Wave Feminism emerged in the 1960s. This movement focused on a multitude
of issues ranging from women gaining control over their sexuality to women
having equality in the workplace.[8] In The Feminine Mystique (1963), Betty
Friedan refers to one of those issues as
"the problem that has no name". The Women's Room encompasses
many ideas central to this movement, and Mira experiences much of the
dissatisfaction common to housewives, discussed in The Feminine Mystique.[citation needed]
Major characters
- Mira is the main character of the novel. Her life is followed from her teenage years into adulthood, during which time she undergoes several transformations.
- Norm is Mira's husband and father of her two children, Normie and Clark. Norm is a doctor and spends a limited amount of time at home with Mira and the children.
- Martha is Mira's closest friend during her life as a housewife with Norm. Martha and Mira are able to sympathize with each other's respective situations as trapped housewives.
- Val is Mira's closest friend in Cambridge. She introduces Mira to second-wave feminist ideas, and Val's comments are some of the most radical in the novel.[9]
- Ben is Mira's love interest. He helps her find sexual satisfaction and independence in a relationship.
Plot details
Mira
and her friends represent a wide cross-section of American society in the 1950s
and 1960s. Mira herself is from a middle-class background. She is mildly
rebellious in that she disagrees with her mother's view of the world. In her
late teens she dates a fellow student named Lanny; one night, when she was
supposed to be out on a date with him, Lanny ignores her, and in response Mira
dances with several men. Mira's actions in this instance gain her a reputation
for being loose. Through this experience and several others with Lanny, Mira
realizes she does not want to marry him because he would leave her at home,
alone, scrubbing floors.
Later,
Mira marries Norm, a future doctor. Mira and Norm have two sons, Norm, Jr.
(referred to as Normie throughout the book) and Clark. During the first few
years of her marriage, Mira develops friendships with three neighborhood women:
Natalie, Adele, and Bliss—all of whom are married with children. The women
begin to throw dinner parties in order to create fun evenings together that
involve their husbands. At the dinner parties there is flirtation among the
different couples. Natalie begins to believe that her husband and Mira are
having an affair, but Mira is able to dismiss Natalie's accusation, and their
bonds survive until Mira discovers that Bliss and Natalie are having affairs
with Adele's husband. The suspicion and actuality of affairs within the group
results in irreversible damage to their friendships.
Mira
and Norm later move to the small town of Beau Reve, where Mira meets fellow
married women with children: Lily, Samantha, and Martha. During this time
Mira's marriage becomes increasingly routine, and Mira finds herself at home,
alone, scrubbing floors. Also while in Beau Reve, Mira witnesses her friends'
struggles: Lily goes mad as a result of her son's rebellious behavior, Samantha
is evicted after her husband loses his job and leaves her, and Martha takes a
married lover who simultaneously gets his wife pregnant. Through her friends,
Mira begins to understand the unfair advantages enjoyed by men in
relationships.
After
many years of marriage, Norm files for divorce (it is hinted that he has been
having an affair for some time) and remarries, leaving Mira on her own. During
this time, Mira, lost without her routine life of wifely duties, attempts to
commit suicide. She is found by Martha, who helps her pick herself up. Mira
returns the help in due time when Martha, too, attempts suicide when trying to
deal with her failed affair and resulting divorce.
Following
her and Norm's divorce, Mira goes to Harvard University
to study for a Ph.D. in English literature, with which she hopes to fulfill her
lifelong dream of teaching. There she meets Val, a militant radical feminist
divorcée with a "precocious" teenage daughter, Chris. It is the
heyday of Women's Liberation
and Mira, now too, finally able to verbalize her discontent at the society
around her, becomes a feminist, although a less radical and militant one than
Val. Their circle includes Isolde (a lesbian divorcée), Kyla (married to
Harley), and Clarissa (married to Duke). It also includes Ben, a diplomat to
the fictional African nation of Lianu, with whom Mira begins a relationship.
Mira
and Ben have a happy relationship, in which Mira is able to maintain a sense of
independence. Mira's development in the relationship contributes to her new
unwillingness to live the life of a stereotypical housewife. When Mira's
children come to visit her at Harvard, her growth and independence is revealed
by a clear change in her views on the dichotomy between motherhood and
sexuality.
While
at college, Val's daughter, Chris, is raped. Following Chris' rape, Val states
(over Mira's protests), "Whatever they may be in public life, whatever
their relationships with men, in their relationships with women, all men are rapists, and that's all they are. They rape us with their eyes, their laws, and their codes."
Mira
later ends her relationship with Ben, after realizing that he expects her to
return to Lianu with him and bear his children. Soon afterward, she discovers
that Val has been shot following a violent protest at the trial of a rape
victim.
The
book ends with a brief summary of where the characters are now. Ben married his
secretary and now has two children. Mira is teaching at a small community
college and is not dating anyone. The
ending is also a doubling back in which the narrator begins to write the story
the reader has just read.
Reception
The
Women's Room received both praise and criticism.
The novel was a New York Times
bestseller the year it was released, 1977.[10] In June 2004, a sample of 500 people attending the Guardian
Hay Festival included The Women's Room in
their list of the top 50 essential contemporary reads, demonstrating that time
has not diminished the importance of French's novel,[11] and as of 2009, The Women's Room sold over 20
million copies and was translated into 20 languages.[12]
Many
women found The Women's Room relatable and stimulating; they were able
to recognize their own lives in Mira's.[13] Susan G. Cole remembers "riding the subway after [The
Women's Room] came out in paperback and noticing five women in one car
devouring it."[14] Susan Faludi
viewed the novel as capable of "[inspiring] an outward-looking passion and
commitment in its readers," which "was no small feat."[15] Gloria
Steinem states that The Women's Room
"expressed the experience of a huge number of women and let them know that
they were not alone and not crazy."[12]
Much
of the negative criticism of The Women's Room is based on the lack of
dynamic male characters in the book. The failure to have any man in the novel
that did not blur together with other male characters allowed negative
criticism to home in on the view of an expressed anti-male sentiment, which
discredited much of the positive and true portrayal of women in the novel.[16] Ellen Goodman discusses this idea that within The
Women's Room, the women are dynamic characters, whereas the male characters
lack depth.[17] Christopher Lehmann-Haupt concurs with Goodman and feels
that while women may relate to the novel, there is little comfort for men
within The Women's Room.[18] Anne Tyler goes a step further than Goodman and
Lehmann-Haupt by stating that the entire novel is "very long and very
narrow" and very biased.[19]
Critics
of The Women's Room considered the novel too harsh on men, whereas its
average women readers did not; the latter found French's writing correct in its
assessment.[20] French's novel was a turning point for feminist fiction.
While non-fiction works, such as The Feminine Mystique, were helping to
recruit feminists, feminist fiction was still not widely read and was
considered reading for only "hardcore" feminists.[20] French's The Women's Room changed that, as shown by
its wide reception and New York Times bestseller ranking.[10]
Other media
- The Women's Room (1980), is a three-hour made-for-TV movie that aired on ABC, starred Lee Remick (as Mira) and Ted Danson (as Norm), and earned three Emmy nominations. The producer, Philip Mandelker, stated that in making the movie they wanted to "create as much controversy as possible, with the purpose of getting men and women to talk to each other."[21] Consequently, it is not surprising that the reviews varied widely. For example, Tom Shales found the movie annoying and a "stinker".[22] In contrast, John J. O'Connor said the movie was a successful adaptation of the book, he thoroughly enjoyed it, and: "No one will be bored."[23]
- The Women's Room (2007), is a BBC Radio dramatization.[citation needed]
References
· "Marilyn French, Novelist and Champion
of Feminism Dies at 79" by A.G. Sulzberger and Herbert Mitgang, The New
York Times May 3, 2009
· · "Marilyn French
dies at 79; author of feminist classic 'The Women's Room'" by Elaine Woo, Los
Angeles Times May 5, 2009
· · "Behind the
Best Sellers" by Herbert Mitgang, The New York Times, December 25,
1977
· · A Bookshelf of
Our Own: Works that Changed Women's Lives by Deborah G. Felder
· · Fictional
Feminism: How American Bestsellers Affect the Movement for Women's Equality
by Kim A. Loudermilk
· · Through Women's
Eyes: An American History by Ellen Carol DuBois and Lynn Dumenil. pg 590
·
· DuBois and Dumenil,
pgs 593-595
· · Dubois and Dumenil,
pgs 664-670
· · Dever, Carolyn
(2000). "The
Feminist Abject: Death and the Constitution of Theory". Studies in the Novel. 32 (2): 185–206. ISSN 0039-3827.
· · "Best
Sellers" New York Times, December 4, 1977
·
"The top 50 essential contemporary reads," The Guardian
(London), June 5, 2004
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