The Daily - The Sunday Read: 'On Female Rage'
Episode Date: August 2, 2020In this episode, Leslie Jamison, a writer and teacher, explores the potentially constructive force of female anger — and the shame that can get attached to it.This story was recorded by Audm. To hea...r more audio stories from publishers like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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I'm Leslie Jamison. I'm a writer and a teacher.
And in 2018, I wrote an essay about women's anger.
So I wrote this piece in early 2018
and actually finished the piece on a hospital bed
a few days after giving birth to my daughter.
And now that feels like another universe. My daughter is two and a half. We're
in the middle of a pandemic. I've been in quarantine with a little toddler who's running
around our tiny apartment. But in so many ways, the ideas that I was writing about in the piece,
exploring the shame that can get attached to
female anger, exploring the potentially constructive force of female anger feel more
relevant to me than ever. And I was thinking a lot about the thrilling, the kind of world-building
force of female anger when I watched Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's speech last week
at the House of Representatives, where she was responding to a particular incident of
harassment that she'd experienced at the hands of another representative.
But she was using that experience to talk about a much larger pattern of sexism, sexual
harassment, misogynistic mistreatment.
And you could see and feel in her words and in her eloquence and in her self-possession
the ways in which she was simultaneously motivated by fury and also harnessing that fury into
argument.
One of the things that AOC's speech was making me think about was the way that Audre Lorde describes anger as something that can potentially function as a kind of corrective surgery.
Which is to say, anger can be destructive. It can be horribly destructive, but it's not always destructive.
horribly destructive, but it's not always destructive. And when that anger is harnessed and turned into awareness, turned into argument, it can change the world.
So here's my essay, I Used to Insist I Didn't Get Angry, Not Anymore, read by Julia Whelan.
Not anymore. Read by Julia Whelan. was mainly about my personality, that sadness was a more natural emotion for me than anger,
that I was somehow built this way. It's easy to misunderstand the self as private, when it's rarely private at all. It's always a public artifact, never fixed, perpetually
sculpted by social forces. In truth, I was proud to describe myself in terms of sadness rather than anger.
Why?
Sadness seemed more refined and also more selfless,
as if you were holding the pain inside yourself rather than making someone else deal with its blunt force trauma.
But a few years ago, I started to get a knot in my gut
at the canned cadences of my own refrain,
I don't get angry, I get sad.
At the shrillest moments of our own self-declarations, I am X, I am not Y, we often
hear in that tinny register another truth lurking expectantly and begin to realize there are things
about ourselves we don't yet know.
By which I mean that at a certain point,
I started to suspect I was angrier than I thought.
Of course, it wasn't anger when I was four years old and took a pair of scissors to my parents' couch,
wanting so badly to destroy something, whatever I could.
Of course, it wasn't anger when I was 16 and my boyfriend broke up with me
and I cut up the inside of my own ankle,
wanting so badly to destroy something, whatever I could.
Of course, it wasn't anger when I was 34 and fighting with my husband
when I screamed into a pillow after he left the house so our daughter wouldn't hear,
then threw my cell phone across the room and spent the next ten minutes searching for it under the bed,
and finally found it in a small pile of cat vomit.
Of course, it wasn't anger, when during a faculty meeting early in my teaching days,
I distributed statistics about how many female students in our department
had reported
instances of sexual harassment the year before. More than half of them. A faculty member grew
indignant and insisted that most of those claims probably didn't have any basis at all.
I clenched my fists. I struggled to speak. It wasn't that I could say for sure what had
happened in each of those cases.
Of course, I couldn't. They were just anonymous numbers on the page, but their sheer volume
seemed horrifying. It demanded attention. I honestly hadn't expected that anyone would
resist these numbers or force me to account for why it was important to look at them.
The scrutiny of the room made me struggle for words
just when I needed them most.
It made me dig my nails into my palm.
What was that emotion?
It was not sadness.
It was rage.
The phenomenon of female anger
has often been turned against itself.
The figure of the angry woman reframed as threat.
Not the one who has been harmed, but the one bent on harming.
She conjures a lineage of threatening archetypes.
The harpy and her talons, the witch and her spells, the medusa and her writhing locks.
The notion that female anger is unnatural or destructive is learned young.
Children report perceiving displays of anger as more acceptable from boys than from girls.
According to a review of studies of gender and anger written in 2000 by Anne M. Kring,
a psychology professor at the University of California, Berkeley, men and women self-report
anger episodes with comparable degrees of frequency, but women report experiencing more
shame and embarrassment in their aftermath. People are more likely to use words like bitchy
and hostile to describe female anger, while male anger is more likely to be described as strong.
to describe female anger, while male anger is more likely to be described as strong.
Kring reports that men are more likely to express their anger by physically assaulting objects or verbally attacking other people, while women are more likely to cry when they get angry,
as if their bodies are forcibly returning them to the appearance of the emotion,
sadness, with which they are most commonly associated. A 2016 study found that it
took longer for people to correctly identify the gender of female faces displaying an angry
expression, as if the emotion had wandered out of its natural habitat by finding its way to their
features. A 1990 study conducted by the psychologists Ulf Dimberg and Ello Lundqvist
found that when female faces are recognized as angry, their expressions are rated as more hostile
than comparable expressions on the faces of men, as if their violation of social expectations had
already made their anger seem more extreme, increasing its volume beyond what could be tolerated.
In What Happened?, her account of the 2016 presidential election,
Hillary Clinton describes the pressure not to come across as angry during the course of her entire political career.
A lot of people recoil from an angry woman, she writes, as well as her own desire
not to be consumed by anger after she lost the race, so that the rest of my life wouldn't be
spent like Miss Havisham from Charles Dickens' Great Expectations, rattling around my house,
obsessing over what might have been. The specter of Dickens' ranting spinster,
spurned and embittered in her crumbling wedding dress,
plotting her elaborate revenge,
casts a long shadow over every woman who dares to get mad.
If an angry woman makes people uneasy,
then her more palatable counterpart, the sad woman,
summons sympathy more readily.
She often looks beautiful in her suffering, ennobled, transfigured, elegant.
Angry women are messier.
Their pain threatens to cause more collateral damage.
It's as if the prospect of a woman's anger harming other people threatens to rob her of the social capital she has gained by being wronged.
We are most comfortable with female anger when it promises to regulate itself, to refrain from recklessness, to stay civilized.
Consider the red carpet clip of Uma Thurman that went viral in November during the initial swell of sexual
harassment accusations. The clip doesn't actually show Thurman's getting angry. It shows her very
conspicuously refusing to get angry. After commending the Hollywood women who had spoken
out about their experiences of sexual assault, she said that she was waiting to feel less angry before she spoke herself.
It was curious that Thurman's public declarations were lauded as a triumphant vision of female
anger because the clip offered precisely the version of female anger that we've long been
socialized to produce and accept. Not the spectacle of female anger unleashed, but the spectacle of female anger restrained,
sharpened to a photogenic point. By withholding the specific story of whatever made her angry,
Thurman made her anger itself the story. And the raw force of her struggle not to get angry on
that red carpet summoned the force of her anger even more powerfully than its full explosion would
have, just as the monster in a movie is most frightening when it only appears off-screen.
This was a question I began to consider quite frequently as the slew of news stories accrued
last fall. How much female anger has been lurking off-screen? How much anger has been biting
its time and biting its tongue, wary of being pathologized as hysteria or dismissed as paranoia?
And what of my own vexed feelings about all this female anger? Why were they even vexed?
It seemed a failure of moral sentiment or a betrayal of feminism, as if I were somehow
siding with the patriarchy or had internalized it so thoroughly I couldn't even spot the edges
of its toxic residue. I intuitively embraced and supported other women's anger, but struggled to
claim my own. Some of this had to do with the ways I'd been lucky. I had experienced all kinds of gendered aggression,
but nothing equivalent to the horror stories so many other women have lived through.
But it also had to do with an abiding aversion to anger that still festered like rot inside me.
In what I had always understood as self-awareness,
I don't get angry, I get sad, I came to see my
own complicity in the same logic that has trained women to bury their anger or perform its absence.
For a long time, I was drawn to sad lady icons, the scribes and bards of loneliness and melancholy. As a certain kind of
slightly morbid, slightly depressive, slightly self-intoxicated, deeply predictable, preemptively
apologetic literary fangirl, I loved Sylvia Plath. I was obsessed with her own obsession with her own blood. What a thrill, that red plush,
and drawn to her suffering silhouette,
a woman abandoned by her cheating husband
and ensnared by the gendered double standards of domesticity.
I attached myself to the mantra of her autobiographical avatar,
Esther Greenwood, who lies in a bathtub in the bell jar,
bleeding during a rehearsal of a suicide
attempt, and later stands at a funeral listening to the old brag of my heart, I am, I am, I am.
Her attachment to pain, her own and others, was also a declaration of identity. I wanted to get it tattooed on my arm.
Whenever I listened to my favorite female singers, it was easier for me to sing along to their sad
lyrics than their angry ones. It was easier to play Ani DiFranco on repeat, crooning about
heartbreak. Did I ever tell you how I stopped eating when you stopped calling me than it was to hear her fury and her irritation
at the ones who stayed sad and quiet in her shadow. Some chick says, thank you for saying
all the things I never do. I say, you know, the thanks I get is to take all the for you.
I kept returning to the early novels of Jean Rees, whose wounded
heroines flopped around dingy rented rooms in various European capitals, seeking solace from
their heartbreak, stating cheap comforters with their wine. Sasha, the heroine of Good Morning
Midnight, the most famous of these early picaresques of pain, resolves to
drink herself to death and manages, mainly, to cry her way across Paris. She cries at cafes,
at bars, in her lousy hotel room. She cries at work. She cries in a fitting room. She cries on
the street. She cries near the Seine. The closing scene of the novel is a scene of terrifying passivity. She
lets a wraith-like man into her bed because she can't summon the energy to stop him, as if she
has finally lost touch with her willpower entirely. In life, Reese was infamous for her sadness,
what one friend called her gramophone needle stuck in a groove thing of going over and over
miseries of one sort and another. Even her biographer called her one of the greatest
self-pity artists in the history of English fiction.
It took me years to understand how deeply I had misunderstood those women.
I'd missed the rage that fueled Plath's poetry
like a ferocious gasoline,
lifting her speakers, sometimes literally, into flight.
Now she is flying, more terrible than she ever was,
red scar in the sky,
red comet over the engine that killed her,
the mausoleum, the wax house.
The speaker becomes a scar, this irrefutable evidence of her own pain,
but this scar, in turn, becomes a comet, terrible and determined,
soaring triumphant over the instruments of her own supposed destruction.
I'd always been preoccupied with the pained disintegration of Plath's speakers,
but once I started looking, I saw the comet trails of their angry resurrections everywhere,
delivering their unapologetic fantasies of retribution.
Out of the ash, I rise with my red hair, and I eat men like air.
I'd loved Reese for nearly a decade before I read her final novel, Wide Sargasso Sea,
a reimagining of Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, whose whole plot leads inexorably toward an act
of destructive anger. The mad first wife of Mr.
Rochester burns down the English country manor where she has been imprisoned in the attic for
years. In this late masterpiece, the heroines of Reese's early novels, heartbroken, drunk,
caught in complicated choreographies of passivity, are replaced by an angry woman with a torch, ready to use the
master's tools to destroy his house. It wasn't that these authors were writing exclusively about
female anger rather than female sorrow. Their writing holds both states of feeling.
Wide Sargasso Sea excavates the deep veins of sadness running beneath an otherwise opaque act
of angry destruction, and Plath's poems are invested in articulating the complicated,
effective braids of bitterness, irony, anger, pride, and sorrow that others often misread as
monolithic sadness. They explain people like that by saying that their minds are in watertight compartments,
but it never seemed so to me, Reese herself once wrote. It's all washing about like the bilge in
the hold of a ship. It has always been easier to shunt female sadness and female anger into the
watertight compartments of opposing archetypes, rather
than acknowledging the ways they run together in the cargo hold of every female psyche.
Near the end of the new biopic I, Tonya, Tonya Harding's character explains,
America, they want someone to love, but they want someone to hate.
want someone to love, but they want someone to hate. The timing of the film's release in late 2017 seemed cosmically apt. It resurrected a definitional prototype of female anger,
at least for many women like me who came of age during the 1990s, at the precise moment that so
many women were starting to get publicly, explicitly, unapologetically angry.
Harding was an object of fascination, not just because of the soap opera she dangled before the
public gaze, supposedly conspiring with her ex-husband and an associate to plan an attack
on her rival figure skater Nancy Kerrigan, but also because she and Kerrigan provided a yin and yang of primal
female archetypes. As a vision of anger, uncouth and unrestrained, the woman everyone loved to hate
exploding at the judges when they didn't give her the scores she felt she deserved,
Harding was the perfect foil for the elegant suffering of Kerrigan, sobbing in her lacy white leotard.
Together, they were an impossible duo to turn away from,
the sad girl and the mad girl, wounded and wicked.
Their binary segregated one vision of femininity we adored,
rule-abiding, delicate, hurting, from another we despised, trashy, whiny, angry.
Harding was strong, she was poor, she was pissed off, and eventually, in the narrative embraced
by the public, she turned those feelings into violence. But I, Tonya illuminates what so little
press coverage at the time paid attention to,
the perfect storm of violence that produced Harding's anger in the first place,
her mother's abuse, and her husband's.
Which is to say, no woman's anger is an island.
When the Harding and Kerrigan controversy swept the media, I was 10 years old. Their story was imprinted onto me as a series of reductive
but indelible brushstrokes. One woman shouting at the media, another woman weeping just beyond
the ice rink. But after watching I, Tonya and realizing how much these two women had existed
to me as ideas rather than as women, I did what any reasonable person would do. I googled
Tanya and Nancy obsessively. I googled, did Tanya ever apologize to Nancy? I googled,
Tanya Harding boxing career? And discovered that it effectively began with her 2002
celebrity boxing match against Paula Jones. Two women paid to perform the absurd caricatures of vengeful
femininity the public had projected onto them. The woman who cried harassment versus the woman
who bashed kneecaps. In the documentaries I watched, I found Harding difficult to like.
She comes off as a self-deluded liar with a robust victim complex focused on her own
misfortune to the exclusion of anyone else's. But what does the fact that I found Harding
difficult to like say about the kind of women I'm comfortable liking? Did I want the plotline
in which the woman who has survived her own hard life, abusive mother, abusive husband,
enduring poverty, also emerges with a likable personality, a plucky spirit, a determined work
ethic, and a graceful, self-effacing relationship to her own suffering? The vision of Harding in
I, Tonya is something close to the opposite of self-effacing.
The film even includes a fantastical reenactment of the crime,
which became popularly known as the whack herd round the world,
in which Harding stands over Kerrigan's cowering body,
baton raised high above her head,
striking her bloody knee until Harding turns back toward the camera, her face defiant
and splattered with Kerrigan's blood. Even though the attack was actually carried out by a hired
hitman, this imagined scene distills the version of the story that America became obsessed with,
in which one woman's anger leaves another woman traumatized.
But America's obsession with these two women wasn't that simple.
There was another story that rose up in opposition.
In this shadow story, Harding wasn't a monster, but a victim,
an underdog unfairly vilified,
and Kerrigan was a crybaby who made too much of her pain. In a 2014 Deadspin essay,
Confessions of a Tonya Harding Apologist, Lucy Madison wrote,
She represented the fulfillment of an adolescent revenge fantasy. My adolescent revenge fantasy.
The one where the girl who doesn't quite fit in manages to soar over
everyone's a** without giving up a fraction of her prerogative, and I could not have loved her more.
When Kerrigan crouched sobbing on the floor near the training rink right after the attack,
Newsweek described it as the sound of one dream breaking, she famously cried out,
Why? Why? Why?
But when Newsweek ran the story on its cover,
it printed the quote as,
Why me?
The single added word turned her shock into keening self-pity.
keening self-pity. These two seemingly contradictory versions of Harding and Kerrigan,
Raging Bitch and Innocent Victim, or Bad Girl Hero and Whiny Crybaby, offered the same cut-out dolls dressed in different costumes. The entitled Weeper was the unacceptable version of a stoic victim.
The scrappy underdog was the acceptable version of a raging bitch. At first glance,
they seemed like opposite stories, betraying our conflicted collective relationship to female anger,
that it's either heroic or uncontrollably destructive, and our love-hate relationship with victimhood itself.
We love a victim to hurt for, but grow irritated by one who hurts too much.
Both stories, however, insisted upon the same segregation. A woman couldn't hurt and be hurt
at once. She could be either angry or sad. It was easier to outsource those emotions to the
bodies of separate women than it was to acknowledge that they reside together in the body of every
woman. Ten years ago in Nicaragua, a man punched me in the face on a dark street. As I sat on a
curb afterward, covered in my own blood,
holding a cold bottle of beer against my broken nose,
a cop asked me for a physical description
of the man who had just mugged me.
Maybe 20 minutes later,
a police vehicle pulled up,
a pickup truck outfitted with a barred cage in the back.
There was a man in the cage.
Is this him?
The cop asked. I shook my head, horrified, acutely aware of my own power, There was a man in the cage. at a local school, and I felt ashamed of my own familiar silhouette, a vulnerable white woman
crying danger at anonymous men lurking in the shadows. I felt scared and embarrassed to be
scared. I felt embarrassed that everyone was making such a fuss. One thing I did not feel was anger.
was anger. That night, my sense of guilt, my shame at being someone deemed worthy of protection and at the ways that protection might endanger others effectively blocked my awareness of my
own anger. It was as if my privilege outweighed my vulnerability, and that meant I wasn't entitled
to any anger at all.
But if I struggled to feel entitled to anger that night in Nicaragua, I have since come to realize that the real entitlement has never been anger. It has always been its absence. The aversion to
anger I had understood in terms of temperament or intention was, in all honesty, also a luxury. When the black
feminist writer and activist Audre Lorde described her anger as a lifelong response to systemic
racism, she insisted upon it as a product of the larger social landscape rather than private emotional ecology. I have lived with that anger, on that anger,
beneath that anger, on top of that anger, for most of my life.
After the Uma Thurman clip went viral, the Trinidadian journalist Stacey Marie Ishmael
tweeted, Interesting, which kinds of women are praised for public anger?
I've spent my whole career reassuring people this is just my face. Michelle Obama was dogged by the
label of angry black woman for the duration of her husband's time in office. Scientific research
has suggested that the experience of racism leads African Americans to suffer from higher blood
pressure than white Americans, and has hypothesized that this disparity arises from the fact that they
accordingly experience more anger and are simultaneously expected to suppress it.
The tennis superstar Serena Williams was fined over $80,000 for an angry outburst against a lineswoman at the U.S. Open in 2009.
I swear to God, I'll expletive take this ball and shove it down your expletive throat.
Gretchen Carlson, a Fox anchor at the time, called another one of Williams' angry outbursts in 2011
a symbol of what's wrong with our society today. Carlson, of course, has since come to
embody a certain brand of female empowerment. One of the leading voices accusing the late Fox News
chairman Roger Ailes of sexual harassment, she recently published a book called Be Fierce,
Stop Harassment, and take your power back.
But the portrait on its cover,
of a fair-skinned, blonde-haired woman smiling slightly in a dark turtleneck,
reminds us that fierceness has always been more palatable
from some women than from others.
What good is anger anyway?
The philosopher Martha Nussbaum invokes Aristotle's definition of anger
as a response to a significant damage that contains within itself a hope for payback,
to argue that anger is not only a stupid way to run one's life, but also a corrosive public force
predicated on the false belief that payback
can redress the wrongdoing that inspired it. She points out that women have often embraced the
right to their own anger as a vindication of equality, part of a larger project of empowerment,
but that its promise as a barometer of equality shouldn't obscure our vision of its dangers. In this
current moment of ascendant female anger, are we taking too much for granted about its value?
What if we could make space for both anger and a reckoning with its price?
In her seminal 1981 essay, The Uses of Anger, Audre Lorde weighs the value of anger differently than Nussbaum,
not in terms of retribution, but in terms of connection and survival.
It's not just a byproduct of systemic evils, she argues,
but a catalyst for useful discomfort and clearer dialogue.
I have suckled the wolf's lip of anger, she writes, and I have used it for
illumination, laughter, protection, fire in places where there was no light, no food, no sisters,
no quarter. Anger isn't just a blaze burning structures to the ground. It also casts a glow,
ground, it also casts a glow, generates heat, and brings bodies into communion. Every woman has a well-stocked arsenal of anger potentially useful against those oppressions, Lord writes, which
brought that anger into being. Confronting my own aversion to anger asked me to shift from seeing
it simply as an emotion to be felt and toward understanding
it as a tool to be used, part of a well-stocked arsenal. When I walked in the Women's March in
Washington a year ago, one body among thousands, the act of marching didn't just mean claiming the
right to a voice. It meant publicly declaring my resolve to use it. I've come to think of anger
in similar terms, not as a claiming of victimhood, but as an owning of accountability. As I write
this essay, Eight Months Pregnant, I don't hope that my daughter never gets angry. I hope that
she lives in a world that can recognize the ways anger and sadness live together, and the ways rage and responsibility, so often seen as natural enemies, can live together as well.
Once upon a time, I had enough anger in me to crack crystal, the poet Kiki Petrosino writes
in her 2011 poem, At the Tea House. I boiled up from bed in my enormous
nightdress with my lungs full of burning chrysanthemums. This is a vision of anger as fuel
and fire, as a powerful inoculation against passivity, as strange but holy milk suckled from the wolf. This anger is more like
an itch than a wound. It demands that something happen. It's my own rage at that faculty meeting
when the voices of students who had become statistics at our fingertips were being asked
to hush up, to step back into their tidy columns. This anger isn't about deserving. It's about
necessity. What needs to boil us out of bed and billow our dresses? What needs to burn in our
voices, glowing and fearsome, fully aware of its own heat?
of its own heat.
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