The Second Sex (French: Le
Deuxième Sexe) is a 1949 book by
the French existentialist Simone de Beauvoir. One of her best-known books, it deals with
the treatment of women throughout history and is often regarded as a major work
of feminist philosophy and the starting point ofsecond-wave feminism.
History
According to Beauvoir,
two factors explain the evolution of women's condition: participation in
production and freedom from reproductive slavery , Beauvoir states the
problem that motherhood left woman "riveted to her body" like an
animal and made it possible for men to dominate her and Nature , she
describes man's gradual domination of women, starting with the statue of a
female Great Goddess found in Susa, and eventually the
opinion of ancient Greeks like Pythagoras who wrote,
"There is a good principle that created order, light and man and a bad
principle that created chaos, darkness and woman." Men succeed in the
world by transcendence, but immanence is the lot of
women, explaining inheritance historically, Beauvoir says men oppress women
when they seek to perpetuate the family and keep patrimony intact. A comparison
follows of women's situation in ancient Greece with Rome. In Greece, with
exceptions like Sparta where there were
no restraints on women's freedom, women are treated almost like slaves. Menander writes,
"Woman is a pain that never goes away." In Rome because men were
still the masters, women enjoyed more rights but, still discriminated against
on the basis of their gender, had only empty freedom.
Beauvoir says that
with the exception of German tradition, Christianity and its clergy served to subordinate
women, quoting Paul the Apostle, Ambrose, and John Chrysostom (who wrote,
"Of all the wild animals, none can be found as harmful as
women.") She also describes prostitution and the changes
in dynamics brought about by courtly love that occurred about the twelfth
century. Beauvoir then describes from the early fifteenth century
"great Italian ladies and courtesans" and singles out the Spaniard Teresa of Ávila as successfully
raising "herself as high as a man."[ Through the
nineteenth century women's legal status remained unchanged but individuals excelled by writing and acting. Some men like Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa,Molière, the Marquis de Condorcet, and François Poullain de la Barre helped women's
status through their works. TheIndustrial Revolution of the nineteenth century gave women an
escape from their homes but they were paid little for their work. Beauvoir then
traces the growth of trade unions and
participation by women. She then examines the spread of birth control methods from
ancient Egypt to the twentieth century, and then touches on the history ofabortion. She then relates
the history of women's suffrage in France, New
Zealand, Australia, the United Kingdom, the United States, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Germany and
the U.S.S.R. Beauvoir writes
that women who have finally begun to feel at home on the earth like Rosa Luxemburg and Marie Curie "brilliantly
demonstrate that it is not women's inferiority that has determined their
historical insignificance: it is their historical insignificance that has
doomed them to inferiority".
Myths
"Myths" has
three chapters. Chapter one is a long, wide-ranging presentation about the
"everlasting disappointment" of women for the most part from a
male heterosexual's point of view. It covers femalemenstruation, virginity, and female sexuality
including copulation, marriage, motherhood, and prostitution. To illustrate man's
experience of the "horror of feminine fertility", Beauvoir quotes
the British Medical Journal of 1878 in which a
member of the British Medical Association writes, "It
is an indisputable fact that meat goes bad when touched by menstruating
women." She quotes poetry by André Breton, Léopold Sédar Senghor, Michel Leiris, Paul Verlaine,Edgar Allan Poe, Paul Valéry, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and William Shakespeare (Hamlet) along with other
novels, philosophers, and films (Citizen Kane)Beauvoir writes on the last page of the
chapter that sexual division is maintained in homosexuality, presumably to
indicate that she thinks her work applies to all humans
Chapter two examines
the bodies of work of five example writers, in six sections, Montherlant or the Bread of Disgust, D. H. Lawrence or Phallic Pride, Claudel or the
Handmaiden of the Lord, Breton or Poetry, Stendhal or Romancing the
Real, and an unnamed summary. Beauvoir writes that these "examples show
that the great collective myths are reflected in each singular writer" "Feminine
devotion is demanded as a duty by Montherlant and Lawrence; less arrogant,
Claudel, Breton, and Stendhal admire it as a generous choice...."[ She finds that woman
is "the privileged Other", that Other is defined in
the "way the One chooses to posit himself",and:
"But the only
earthly destiny reserved to the woman equal, child-woman, soul sister,
woman-sex, and female animal is always man."
The chapter closes with
the thought, "The absence or insignificance of the female element in a
body of work is symptomatic... it loses importance in a period like ours in
which each individual's particular problems are of secondary import."
In Chapter three,
Beauvoir says that "mystery" is prominent among men's myths about
women. She also says mystery is not confined by sex to women but instead
by situation, and that it pertains to any slave. She thinks it
disappeared, for example, during the eighteenth century when men however
briefly considered women to be peers. To close Part One, she quotes Arthur Rimbaud who writes that
hopefully one day, women can become fully human beings when man gives her her
freedom.
Formative Years
Part One has four
chapters. In chapter one "Childhood", sometimes quoting Colette Audry, Helene Deutsch, Thyde Monnier, and
Dr. W. Liepmann Beauvoir presents a child's life beginning with birth and
attachment to maternal flesh.She contrasts a girl's upbringing with a boy's,
who at age 3 or 4 is told he is a "little man". A
girl is taught to be a woman and her "feminine" destiny is imposed on
her by her teachers and society. She has, for example, no innate
"maternal instinct". A girl comes to believe in and to
worship a male god and to create imaginary adult lovers. The discovery of
sex is a "phenomenon as painful as weaning" and she views it with
disgust. When she discovers that men, not women, are the masters of the
world the revelation "imperiously modifies her consciousness of
herself". Beauvoir concludes this chapter with a description of puberty and
starting menstruation as well as the
way girls imagine sex with a man.
In chapter two
"The Girl", Beauvoir describes ways that girls in their late teens
accept their "femininity". Girls might do this by running away from
home, through fascination with the disgusting, by following nature, or by
stealing.Chapter three "Sexual Initiation" is a description of sexual
relations with men. Along with numbers of psychiatrists, Beauvoir believed that
the repercussions of the first of these experiences informs a woman's whole
life. Chapter four "The Lesbian" is a description of sexual
relations with women, which Beauvoir believed that society thought was a
"forbidden path"]She wrote that "homosexuality is no more a deliberate
perversion than a fatal curse]
Situation
"Situation"
has six chapters. In chapter five "The Married Woman" Beauvoir
demonstrates her negative thoughts about marriage saying that "to ask two
spouses bound by practical, social and moral ties to satisfy each other
sexually for their whole lives is pure absurdity" Beauvoir says
a woman finds her dignity only in accepting her vassalage which is bed
"service" and housework "service".A woman is weaned away
from her family and finds only "disappointment" on the day after her
wedding. Beauvoir points out various inequalities between a wife and
husband (in, for example, age) and finds they pass the time not in love but in
"conjugal love".She thinks that marriage "almost always destroys
woman. She states that the issue of abortion is not an issue of morality
but of “masculine sadism” toward woman. The following fourteen pages
describe pregnancy. Pregnancy is
viewed as both a gift and a curse to woman. In this new creation of a new life
the woman loses her Self, seeing herself as "no longer anything...[but] a
passive instrument" When she arrives at children, Beauvoir continues
in negative mode with, "maternal sadomasochism creates guilt feelings
for the daughter that will express themselves in sadomasochistic behavior
toward her own children, without end". She finishes with an appeal
for socialist child rearing
practices, "in a properly organized society where the child would in great
part be taken charge of by the group".
Then "Social
Life", Beauvoir describes a woman's clothes, her girlfriends and her
relationships with priests, doctors, famous performers, and lovers concluding
that "adultery, friendships, and social life are but diversions within
married life". She also thinks, "marriage, by frustrating
women's erotic satisfaction, denies them the freedom and individuality of their
feelings, drives them to adultery".
"Woman's
Situation and Character", Beauvoir says a woman knows how to be as active,
effective and silent as a man She says Stendhal said that woman handles
masculine logic "as skillfully as man if she has to"But her situation
keeps her being useful, preparing food, clothes, and lodging. She worries
because she does not doanything, she complains, she cries, and she may
threaten suicide. She protests but doesn't escape her lotShe may achieve
happiness in "Harmony" and the "Good" as illustrated by Virginia Woolf and Katherine Mansfield She is the target of religion Beauvoir thinks it is
pointless to try to decide whether woman is superior or inferior, and that it
is obvious that the man's situation is "infinitely
preferable" She writes, "for woman there is no other way out
than to work for her liberation"
The Second Sex is:
primarily a
middle-class document, so distorted by autobiographical influences that the
individual problems of the writer herself may assume an exaggerated importance
in her discussion of femininity
Classicist David M.
Halperin writes
that Beauvoir gives an idealized account of sexual relations between women,
suggesting that they reveal with particular clarity the mutuality of erotic
responsiveness that characterizes women's eroticism
Literary scholar Camille Paglia praised The
Second Sex, calling it "brilliant" and "the supreme work of
modern feminism."
The Second Sex as
one of the influences on her 1990 work of literary criticism Sexual Personae, writes that most
modern feminists do not realize the extent to which their work has simply
repeated or qualified its arguments Millett commented in 1989 that she did
not realize the extent to which she was indebted to Beauvoir when she wrote Sexual
Politics.
Sexual Politics is a 1969 book by Kate Millett. Based on her PhDdissertation, it is a classic feminist text, said to be "the first book of
academic feminist literary criticism", and
"one of the first feminist books of this decade to raise nationwide male
ire".
Sexual Politics was an important theoretical
touchstone for the second wave feminism of the 1970s. It was also extremely
controversial. Norman Mailer, whose work, especially his 1965 novel An American Dream, had been criticised by Millett, wrote
the article “The Prisoner of Sex” in Harper's Magazine in response, attacking
Millett's claims and defending Miller and Lawrence, and later extensively
attacked her writings in his non-fiction book of the same name. Richard Webster writes that Millett's "analysis of
the reactionary character of psychoanalysis" was inspired bySimone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex. Juliet Mitchell argues that Millett, like many other feminists, misread Freud
and misunderstood the implications of psychoanalytic theory for feminism.
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