The Modern Androgyne Imagination: A Failed Sublime

Front Cover
University of Virginia Press, 2000 - Literary Criticism - 220 pages

In the late nineteenth century, as changing cultural representations of gender roles and categories made differences between men and women increasingly difficult to define, theorists such as Havelock Ellis, Richard von Krafft-Ebing, and Sigmund Freud began to postulate a third, androgynous sex. For many modern artists, this challenge to familiar hierarchies of gender represented a crisis in artistic authority. Faced with the failure of the romantic muse and other two-sex tropes for the imagination, James Joyce, H. D., William Faulkner, Virginia Woolf, and other modernist writers of both sexes became attracted to a culturally specific notion of an androgynous imagination.

In The Modern Androgyne Imagination, Lisa Rado explores the dynamic process through which these writers filled the imaginative space left by the departed muse. For Joyce, the androgynous imagination meant experimenting with the idea of a "new womanly man." H. D. personified her "overmind" as the androgynous Ray Bart. Faulkner supplanted the muse with the hermaphrodite. And Woolf became a kind of psychic transsexual.

Although they selected these particular tropes for different reasons, literary men and women shared the desire to embody perceived strengths of both sexes and to transcend sexual and artistic limitation altogether. However, courting this androgynous imagination was a risky act. It often evoked the dynamics, even the specific vocabulary, of the sublime, which Rado characterizes as a perilous confrontation with and attempted identification between self and the transcendent other--that powerful, androgynous creative mind--through which they hoped to generate authority and find inspiration.

This empowerment toward which Joyce, H. D., Faulkner, and Woolf gesture in texts such as Ulysses, HERmione, The Sound and the Fury, and Orlando is rarely achieved. Joyce and Faulkner were unable to silence their fears of feminization and the female body, while H. D. and Woolf remained troubled by the threat of ego incorporation and self-erasure that the androgynous model of the imagination portends. Still, their pursuit of new imaginative tropes yields important insights into the work of these writers and of literary modernism.

 

Contents

Modernism Androgyny and the Sublime Toward a Cultural Theory of the Imagination
From the Sublime to the Ridiculous Is But a Step Androgyny and Masochism in Joyce
24
The Perfection of the Fiery Moment H D and the Androgynous Poetics of Overmind
58
A Perversion That Builds Chartres and Invents Lear Is a Pretty Good Thing Psychic Incest and Haunted Hermaphroditism in Faulkner
97
A Toy Boat on the Serpentine Its EcstasyEcstasy Woolfs Sublimating Sublime
136
Another Look at the Androgyne Modernism and the End of The Author
177
Notes
185
Works Cited
201
Index
215
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2000)

Lisa Rado, who edited Modernism, Gender, and Culture and Rereading Modernism: New Directions in Feminist Criticism, teaches at the Harvard-Westlake School in Los Angeles.