i put off reading it for a month or two, having been published in 1990, it wasn't on the top of my to-read pile. i mistakenly thought that feminist politics had come a long way since 1990. i was wrong.

as suleiman points out, "like modern capitalism, modern patriarchy has a way of assimilating any number of potentially subversive gestures into the mainstream, where whatever subversive energy they may have possessed becomes neutralized." so, really, how far have we come in twenty years? feminist texts have increased, words like cunt or pussy have beem reclaimed, and we have demanded recognition in our fields and our political actions. yet, so many of us women still feel a deep discontent in current movements and academia.
suleiman writes of the surrealists and their lack of representation of women within the movement until the later stages when surrealism was dying (noting that movements and academia fail to let women into their discourse until they are truly struggling or at their end) and breton's nadja - a semi-autobiographical account of breton's relationship with "mad" woman. in contrast to nadja, suleiman cites the ravishing of lol v stein by duras as an essential text to the feminist movement and criticizes it's marginality compared to breton's novel. i'm impressed by suleiman as she explores women, madness, and the narrative of the texts through freudian psychoanalysis.
in short, by exploring freud's desire for "narrative mastery" when writing of dora and his seeming blindness and unconscious desire to manipulate the story, suleiman contrasts duras' writing to breton's writing. both texts are told from the viewpoint of a male, somewhat haphazard in their retelling. however, since duras writes from a female point of view she is able to direct the reader to understand the sanity behind the seeming madness of lola stein whereas both breton and freud found their protagonists completely mad and attributed their madness to somewhat phantasmagorical, or atleast fantastical, narratives that the men created.
having just learned of duras' work when i read suleiman, i immediately checked out the ravishing of lol v stein from the edendale branch of the los angeles public library system and finished it in one day. i must admit, it was rather disappointing. i'd hoped for so much more from a french novel written in the 60's. especially since suleiman used this particular text to dismiss freud and breton, i expected something much more radical than what reads like a romance novel but not nearly as raunchy.
this brings me back to my point. could duras' writing have been marginalized because breton's writing is more exciting, more spectacular. i, myself, was more drawn to breton's writing. duras' novel seems much more toned down in comparison.
is this why there are fewer female philosophers and theorists than male?
are radical ideologies and concepts presented by women dismissed as madness whereas the men are applauded?

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