For
those of you who haven’t yet seen Love
and Friendship (Whit Stillman’s brilliant film adaptation---but with a
confusing new title---of Jane Austen’s novella Lady Susan); or for those who’ve seen it, but were puzzled and/or
troubled by the seeming irreconcilable contradictions between its subversive
anti-romantic themes, on the one hand, and the sophisticated positive romance most
people see in Jane Austen’s six novels and the film adaptations thereof, on the
other, here’s some background for you to consider, that I hope will help
reconcile those apparent contradictions. I’ve previously written several times about
the deliberate, subversively feminist, wish-fulfilment fantasy aspects I see in
Jane Austen’s Lady Susan, and here
are my current thoughts, which have evolved during the past six months, after
rereading Austen’s novella, and seeing Stillman’s film twice.
How is it that the aspiring novelist
JA decided to make a conscienceless female rake, who revels in her effortless
ability to manipulate others, but especially men, the heroine of a novella? And
how did Austen also manage to make Lady Susan so irresistibly witty, daring,
and entertaining, that we actually fall under her spell, and somehow forget to
recoil in disgust at her machinations? For those of you who’ve only seen Kate
Beckinsale’s brilliant, indeed award-worthy, performance as Lady Susan in
Stillman’s film, and haven’t read Austen’s novella… http://www.janeausten.ac.uk/manuscripts/lady_susan/1.html
…rest assured that pretty much all those amazing zingers that Beckinsale
delivers so perfectly were, almost word for word, Jane Austen’s own – so the
film is not anachronistic, it doesn’t impose a modern sensibility on a late 18th
century woman, it’s faithful to the sociopathic brilliance of JA’s own heroine.
I think that part of what makes many
readers (and viewers), like myself, lack sympathy for the victims of Lady
Susan's guile --- especially the male victims--- is that Lady Susan manages to
turn what is ordinarily a kind of death sentence for middle-aged women in that
era --becoming a widow without money--into opportunity for herself --- sorta
like a self-serving Robin Hood. I see Lady Susan as a kind of “Austenstein”
monster, a female Nemesis sicced on the male-dominated world Jane Austen grew
up in, as poetic justice for the abuse and oppression of all women, both
married and single, in that world.
While Lady Susan doesn’t resemble
any of the heroines of Austen’s six novels, it’s often been noted that she is a
lot like Mary Crawford, the enigmatic siren of Mansfield Park. I’m firmly in the camp of those who see Mary C. as
a sympathetic character, a courageous whistle-blower who tries to warn the
heroine Fanny Price against the abusive hypocrisy of the Bertram family. I also
see a resemblance between Lady Susan and another seemingly negative Austen
character not often compared to her --- Lucy Steele in Sense & Sensibility --- whose married name, as I pointed out in
2005, is LUCY FERRARS aka "Lucifer!
How so? After all, Lady Susan is
well educated, with impeccable social graces, whereas Lucy seems an uneducated
social climber. The deeper similarity I see between the two, is that Lady
Susan, like Lucy, is a woman without scruples, who gets her way by using her
own superior, nearly Satanic psychological acumen to exert influence over
others - and she particularly rises to the challenge when someone dares to
stand in her path and attempt to thwart her. In particular, they both boldly
invade a respectable, wealthy family, and wreak havoc in it, the way a skilled
borderline personality can do (apropos my friend Christine Shih’s claims that
borderline personality was a key theme in Austen’s writing).
I see Lucy doing exactly the same as
Lady Susan, once she "invades" the Ferrars family in S&S -- in
particular, in the way I see Lucy as holding Edward on a string, and
neutralizing sad clueless Elinor by making Elinor her "confidante";
while Lucy does her real work behind the scenes on Robert
Ferrars, setting up the mousetrap on the Ferrars family. And then, when the
time is just right, Lucy’s secret is "accidentally" revealed by her
sister, and the trap is sprung on Mrs. Ferrars, who unwittingly does Lucy's
bidding by disinheriting Edward, and making Robert her vested heir—whereupon
Mrs. Ferrars has no way to squirm out of that trap.
I also see a continuation of JA’s grudging
admiration for a transgressive female like Lady Susan, in JA’s famous and very
candid comment to Martha Lloyd in her January 1812 letter: "I suppose all the World is sitting in
Judgement upon the Princess of Wales's Letter. Poor woman, I shall support her
as long as I can, because she is a Woman, & because I hate her Husband --
but I can hardly forgive her for calling herself ``attached & affectionate'
to a Man whom she must detest -- & the intimacy said to subsist between her
& Lady Oxford is bad -- I do not know what to do about it; but if I must
give up the Princess, I am resolved at least always to think that she would
have been respectable, if the Prince had behaved only tolerably by her at
first. --"
In effect, Lady Susan is Austen’s
vision of a woman like Princess Caroline, but on steroids. Indeed, JA might well
have said about Lady Susan something like “if I must give up Lady Susan, I am
resolved at least always to think that she would have been respectable, if the
patriarchal social system had not been totally rigged against women, and she
could have attained personal fulfilment in an ethical way".
And finally, in case anyone thinks
Jane Austen as she got older was no longer in tune with having a villainess as
heroine of an Austen story, just remember what JA wrote in her next to last
surviving letter, in May 1817, to her old dear friend Anne Sharp, only months
before JA's death (and Diana Parker in Sanditon, the novel JA began
writing just before she died, also resembles Lady Susan in her exertion of
influence on several people at once, like a circus juggler with ten dishes twirling
atop ten poles):
"Lady P. writing to you even
from Paris for advice!-It is the Influence of Strength over Weakness
indeed.-Galigai de Concini for ever & ever.-Adeiu.- “
"the influence of Strength over
Weakness indeed"! That could very well be Lady Susan’s motto as well! I am
thinking in particular about what Lady Susan writes to his bosom buddy Alicia
Johnson about her current “mark”, Reginald de Courcy, that partakes of the same
attitude: “He is lively & seems
clever, & when I have inspired him with greater respect for me than his
sister's kind offices have implanted, he may be an agreable Flirt. There is exquisite pleasure in subduing an insolent
spirit, in making a person predetermined to dislike, acknowledge one's
superiority. I have disconcerted him already by my calm reserve; & it shall
be my endeavour to humble the Pride of these
self-important De Courcies still lower, to
convince Mrs .
Vernon that her sisterly cautions have been bestowed in vain, & to persuade
Reginald that she has scandalously belied me. This project will serve at least
to amuse me, &prevent my feeling so acutely this dreadful separation
from You & all whom I love. Adeiu. Yours Ever S. Vernon.”
And Jane Austen herself, from the
time she first picked up a quill pen as a teenaged author, to the day she died
when she was too sick to even hold a pen, and despite her being a woman with
little money, managed to use the enormous strength of her mind to achieve true
immortality, and give inspiration to countless women oppressed by the patriarchy,
who've read her novels, and derived strength and inspiration to be strong
despite gender-based obstacles still placed in their path. Austen was herself a
rebel, who dared to satirize the greatest and most powerful in her novels,
because she knew her own extraordinary psychological powers. Even Don Juan was
of interest to her, as she wrote in 1814, a decade or more after she created Lady
Susan: “I have seen
nobody on the stage who has been a more interesting Character than that
compound of Cruelty and Lust”.
Now
here are links, with excerpts, from three excellent articles on Lady Susan I’ve collected recently:
First, a
great review of the novella and film, with which I am in total agreement: http://kathmandupost.ekantipur.com/news/2016-07-16/true-and-false.html
“True and false” by Preena Shrestha, Jul 16, 2016
“…look closely, and you’ll realise that as much
as [Austen] indulges in the frivolous trappings of that society, she is
actually, with great subtlety, wit and flair, skewering them at the same time.
These satirical jabs are never more evident than in her portrayals of the lives
of women at a time when their desires and individualities were consistently
suppressed by the rules of social decorum and the all-encompassing need to Find
A Husband—constraints that her heroines were always quietly struggling against
in some form or the other. In this regard, Austen was a woman beyond her time:
her work wasn’t just a catalogue of the fashions and habits of her time, but
more a dig into the human condition at large, into relationships and behaviours
shaped by the competing forces of romance and pragmatism, self and
society—universal themes all, and still relevant to this day. …there’s such a
churning of emotional complexity and conflict under that shiny surface of
propriety, and so much to be gleaned from not just what is said indirectly, but
also what isn’t said at all.
…Over the course of [Love and Friendship], we watch as our heroine (or anti-heroine
more like) expertly manipulates them, and others in the periphery, to carve out
the most advantageous deal for herself, leaving behind the usual wreckage in
her wake. You might not agree with everything Lady Susan says or does—she can
be a selfish b***h of the first order at the best of times—but you also can’t
help but marvel at how well she’s learned to navigate around the strictures
placed on her by society. Options for women back then, widows even more so,
were painfully limited after all, given that they generally could not inherit
property and were discouraged from working—a premise that basically fueled six
whole series of Downton Abbey—so that survival was contingent on making the
right match. So while her power over men might not translate to power in the
real sense, it’s satisfying to see that at least she’s not submitting quietly,
and has no delusions about her situation. She uses what she has—her looks, her
charms and that devious mind-to get what she wants, and there’s a certain
delight in watching her bludgeon her way through the mores of such an
oppressive society. She isn’t vain; she’s practical. The only time we ever glimpse any softness in Lady Susan would be when
it comes to Mrs Johnson, as loyal and intimate a connection as could be; love
and romance might have been brought down a couple of pegs in the film, but it
doesn’t appear to have lost its faith in friendship.
…Love & Friendship is the sort of thing I can see myself going back to time and again over the years in the tradition of other Austen films. Speaking of the lady herself, would she approve of Stillman’s adaptation had she been here to see it? I like to think she’d have been laughing out loud.” END QUOTE
…Love & Friendship is the sort of thing I can see myself going back to time and again over the years in the tradition of other Austen films. Speaking of the lady herself, would she approve of Stillman’s adaptation had she been here to see it? I like to think she’d have been laughing out loud.” END QUOTE
Shrestha’s comments about the “friendship”
between Lady Susan and Mrs. Johnson made me wonder whether JA, in this “anti-romance”,
in fact hid a genuine love affair in plain sight– one between these two naughty
ladies, who remain faithful to each other, and, indeed, do all they can to be
together!
Second, here’s a great, brief summary of the
influence of Mary Wollstonecraft on Austen’s novella:
https://fee.org/articles/jane-austen-vindicates-the-rights-of-women/ “Jane Austen
Vindicates the Rights of Women” by Sarah Skwire
June 2016
“JA’s
Lady Susan is a wrecking ball in petticoats. JA's Lady Susan is a powerful adjunct to Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Women. The main character of
the new film Love and Friendship, drawn from JA’s novella Lady Susan, is a widowed mother of a
marriageable daughter. She is also widely known as “the most accomplished
Coquette in England.” She has a married lover. She seduces wealthy young men
who are courting eligible young women, including her own daughter. She tries to
force her daughter into marriage with a young man who would
take a blue ribbon in Monty Python’s “Upper Class Twit of the Year”
competition. She lies. She runs out on her debts. She is thoroughly
reprehensible. And she is enormous fun to watch….Love
and Friendship and Lady Susan are antidotes to the limiting
vision of JA as “quaint and darling, doe-eyed and demure, parochial if not
pastoral, and dizzily, swooningly romantic,” as novelist Robert Rodi put it. But
I’m not interested in Lady Susan just because she’s one of the great
antiheroines of English literature — up there with Thackeray’s Becky Sharp and
Trollope’s Lizzie Eustace. I’m not interested just because she highlights
Austen’s often overlooked sharp intelligence and acerbic wit. I’m interested because I am persuaded that
in her creation of Lady Susan, Austen was drawing heavily on the work of one of
the great early classical liberal feminists — Mary Wollstonecraft. Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman was
published in 1792. Austen, it seems likely, composed Lady Susan around 1793 or 1794. Austen
scholars agree that she must have read Wollstonecraft’s work. But reading A Vindication and
Lady Susan together makes me think that Austen wasn’t just influenced by reading Wollstonecraft’s
book; she seems to have used it as a template for the main character’s behavior.
And that makes Lady Susan a lot more
interesting. Wollstonecraft argues that the women of her time — and Austen’s
time — were “weak, artificial beings, raised above the common wants and
affections of their race, in a premature unnatural manner, [who] undermine the
very foundation of virtue, and spread corruption through the whole mass of
society.” Their corrupting influence, though, is not due to some sort of
original sin handed down from Eve after the Garden of Eden. It is the result of
the conscious and intentional educating of women out of natural virtue and into
habituated weakness, dependence, and immorality. She continues: “Women are, in
fact, so much degraded by mistaken notions of female excellence, that I do not
mean to add a paradox when I assert, that this artificial weakness produces a
propensity to tyrannize, and gives birth to cunning, the natural opponent of
strength, which leads them to play off those contemptible infantine airs that
undermine esteem even whilst they excite desire.” This is Lady Susan in a
nutshell. Her tyrannical hold over her daughter’s future, her constant
deceptions in matters large and small, and her pretended helplessness and
innocence, which her male acquaintances interpret as charm — these are all hallmarks
of her character. Even more apropos is Wollstonecraft’s description of women
who have been educated in this fashion and who are then left, as is Lady Susan,
widowed and with a family to care for: “But supposing, no very improbable
conjecture, that a being only taught to please must still find her happiness in
pleasing; — what an example of folly, not to say vice, will she be to her
innocent daughters! The mother will be lost in the coquette, and, instead of
making friends of her daughters, view them with eyes askance, for they are
rivals — rivals more cruel than any other, for they invite a comparison, and
drive her from the throne of beauty, who has never thought of a seat on the
bench of reason.” Wollstonecraft adds that it doesn’t take a literary genius to
imagine the “domestic miseries and petty vices” occasioned by such a mother.
A world without real education for women, a world without legal
equality for women — this is a world that is rife with Lady Susans. But in Austen’s imagining of Lady
Susan, we have precisely that — a literary genius turning her considerable
talents (though in early days) to delineating
a portrait of a woman who has become precisely what she has been educated to be.
In that way, Lady Susan becomes a powerful adjunct to Wollstonecraft’s Vindication. A world without real education for
women, a world without legal equality for women — this is a world that is rife
with Lady Susans, grappling for power and money in the marriage market and in
the gray market of sexual favors, because that is the only sphere open to women
with ambition. While Austen’s and Wollstonecraft’s works are more than capable
of standing on their own, taken together they provide a persuasive argument —
philosophical and artistic — for the importance of women’s liberty and for the
crippling effects of denying that liberty.”
And
finally, for true wonks like me, here’s the first portion of a scholarly
article that excavates the deeper scholarly roots of Austen’s Lady Susan: “Justice
in Epistolary Matters: Revised Rights and Deconstructed Duties in Austen's Lady
Susan” by Betsy Tontiplaphol in Persuasions
Online #27 (2006) http://www.jasna.org/persuasions/on-line/vol27no1/tontiplaphol.htm
“Jane Austen’s Lady Susan has been called a
plotter, a flirt, and a villain, but none of these designations effectively
accounts for the peculiarities—her linguistic industriousness, distaste for
motherhood, and chameleon-like adaptability, to name but a few—that render her
characterization so memorable.
Brodie
describes Lady Susan as a figure devoid of psychological depth; when measured
against the “the psychological complexity of Anne Elliot,” Brodie argues, Susan
represents “the stereotype of the Merry Widow”.
Anderson,
in contrast, reads Austen’s anti-heroine as nothing but psychology. Lady
Susan, Anderson maintains, is a psychopath, a diagnosis that she supports with
evidence of “superficial charm, adequate intelligence, absence of anxiety,
insincerity, lack of remorse or shame, antisocial behavior, and poor judgment”. What is Lady
Susan? A
stock character, a case study, or something else entirely?
As
McKellar contends, her story “fits into the Austen canon no more neatly than
Aesop’s bat fit in with the birds or with the beasts”, but such an observation,
however fair, does little to resolve the myriad conflicts that face the reader
struggling to decipher Susan’s—or, for that matter, Austen’s—motives and
objectives.
It is
strangely easy to overlook the fact that Lady Susan is,
at a fundamental level, a trial novel, trial
not
only in the sense of “attempt” but trial also
in the significant judicial sense. The
book is one of Austen’s early attempts at epistolary fiction; perhaps more
important, however, is the fact that LS has
at its center a woman on trial, a figure
whose motives and actions are presented to and scrutinized by a jury composed
of characters, readers, and ultimately a narrator. Susan’s
stated goal to have Reginald “doubt the justice of” his sister’s opinion and
Mrs. Vernon’s complaint that Susan has “persuaded [Reginald] not merely to
forget, but to justify her conduct” are only two of many instances in which the legal-contractual language of justice
surfaces in Austen’s rhetoric. Indeed, careful attention to LS’s writing
and behavior reveals her to be less a criminal than a would-be legislator. Her
abiding interest in her own rights and duties—and her obsession with
manipulating the assumptions and language that define and distribute them—locates her within a theoretical tradition
that ranges from John Locke to Mary WOLLSTONECRAFT and beyond. …”
So, now go see Stillman’s film with all these
thoughts in your mind, and I hope it will leave you less puzzled and/or disturbed,
and even more entertained, by Austen’s subversive, way-ahead-of-its-time
feminist genius, and Stillman’s remarkably fine and faithful adaptation
thereof.
Cheers, ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode on Twitter
No comments:
Post a Comment