Once, the term “women writer”
did not mean celebrity author or jaunty comedy woman, full of exuberant wit, or gently envied best seller. Those words brought a kind of doom.
As a teenager I felt haunted by the
ghosts of tragic women writers: George Eliot forced to become a recluse;
Christina Rossetti, dying an invalid on her couch; the Bronte sisters, dying of
consumption and sadness; Sylvia Plath, resting her unhappy head in the gas oven
and even the great Virginia Woolf, drowning with pockets full of stones.
Such often inaccurate versions of their lives tolled
like bells, warning me that “being a writer” was an unwise choice. These writers - or what I knew of them then - offered solid evidence that any girl or woman bold enough to write faced loneliness,
unhappiness, disgrace, and illness, Probably there would be madness death by one's own hand.
I was too young to know that "happy writer" does not make good copy.
Besides. there were whispers of madness close to home. My great-aunt and grandmother spent time in mental asylums, as such places were called. I had seen their empty, bewildered eyes and how hard they found it to hold on to reality. I'd heard talk about "electric treatment" and "women's problems" and other mutterings. I was terrified that “trying to be a writer” would invite such shadows into my already unstable life and lead towards that unhappy darkness.
I was too young to know that "happy writer" does not make good copy.
Besides. there were whispers of madness close to home. My great-aunt and grandmother spent time in mental asylums, as such places were called. I had seen their empty, bewildered eyes and how hard they found it to hold on to reality. I'd heard talk about "electric treatment" and "women's problems" and other mutterings. I was terrified that “trying to be a writer” would invite such shadows into my already unstable life and lead towards that unhappy darkness.
Time has passed, and now is not how it was back then, what with equal opportunities and writing courses, and a host of women writers and more. Yet I can't have been the only would-be writer stretched out between longing and fear, being subtly taught that writing was definitely an unsuitable and dangerous occupation for a woman.
So, right now, although I feel sadness about Maya Angelou’s passing, I feel glad that she offered a different model. I thank the many joyful heavens
for her and her generous spirit. She was a woman writer who lived into a fine
old age, kept her thirst for justice, her love of words and, incredibly, and her
hope for humanity alive, despite all the terrible things in her life. She did not die young.She was not a tragedy.
Writers like Maya – the
ones who survive and last long, who do good work, who lead positive and full lives - are also the
ones we should celebrate, the ones we need to chase away our writing fears, the
ones who call out sisterly encouragement, no matter how hard they have lived. We need the joyful ghosts.
And for all those male
writers haunted by similar tragic ghosts, I hope you find your good angels too.
Penny Dolan
www.pennydolan.com
6 comments:
Penny, so glad you did 'invite the shadows' - look at the result!
Joyful ghosts, we salute you!
Brainpickings blog highlights some of Maya's words & philosophy today. Sorry, this will be a cut and paste activity:
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2014/05/29/maya-angelou-on-identity-and-the-meaning-of-life/
how it feels haunted by the ghosts of tragic women
So many writers, male and female, have had such tragic lives- artistic temperament? It's good to have Maya Angelou to go against the grain, not that there wasn't tragedy in her life too.
Having experienced two writer friends'... both male... suicides, your blog was particularly poignant. Maya Angelou was truly an amazing women. Thank you for reminding us Penny.
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