Wednesday, March 9, 2022

The Voice of Water


 Aphrodite Rising: Life at the Margins and the Watery Realm in 1890’s American                                                        Literature

Introduction

 

“According to the newspapers, the convention had been “an open violation of common decency-the association of black and white-male and female.”

Holly Jackson, on the Pennsylvania Hall Fire of 1838.

 

A dialectical Hegelian thought process is at the center of Dubois’ The Souls of Black Folk- the integration of opposites, the liminal space between polarities.  The eventful moment in 1838 was the culmination of the resistance to the quelling of polarities that had been happening in American political and cultural life:  the grand lecture hall in Philadelphia was burned to the ground. Abolitionists had raised funds to build the building, and a convention of antislavery women was held there and even despite threats, “the women took the podium anyway.” The women had been screamed at and “white and black women linked arms as they left the hall that night, a show of solidarity in case the women of color were singled out for especially violent attacks.” (Jackson 73-4) The crowd burst in later with axes and torched the building. When firemen arrived, they saved only the surrounding buildings from the flames. The antislavery women were blamed for the danger and the destruction in the end. An article in the Philadelphia Gazette “celebrates the firemen for sharing the feelings of the crowd and not allowing one drop of water to fall on the burning building.” (Jackson 76) The ire of the mobs was not put out by the water. Like the fire that ripped through those buildings, the anger fed on itself and used misplaced blame to counter their unrecognized shame. It spread like wildfire, and violence and hatred became the core of the crowd, meaning that it became the norm. If this norm was contested, the protestor(s) would be shut down.

If water had been used liberally as it should have, the polarities would have reached the point of synthesis. Unfortunately, this did not happen that way, and decades later would prove that this imbalance had a profound effect on how the country would recover from the Civil War that would enfold shortly after: North vs. South. What is important here is to note that this event had occurred in the North. Incidentally, Frederick Douglas escaped slavery in New York in the year 1838 (not one year later). He would subsequently be troubled by ejection multiple times from train cars (Jim Crow car) as he insisted that it was unfair to be forced to sit in lesser conditions due to his color. He kept trying to forcibly quell the polarity, however.

            What is it about water and liminal “grey” spaces that feel like home to marginalized people? Why does Dubois turn to water in his text, from the outset? Why does Edna lose herself without struggle into the water at the end of The Awakening? The answer may lie within what water means to us as a symbol, and perhaps it could mean that in water we are one with our bodies. No one can “own” us there.  Even those who were speaking out against slavery could not “own” a building that they had paid for and constructed on their own. It was left to burn even though it could have been saved. Could the emphasis on water be part of the polarity of fire/destruction vs. water/healing/recovery? Could Edna too have been saved by the water? Had she herself “synthesized” the polarities present in her own life, could she have managed to quell the hopelessness that she felt at the end of the novel?

            There is a long tradition of linking water with renewal or baptism, rebirth, and the imagination. We could also move even further into water being the realm of the erotic. We enter into this world through water, and we learn early on that this is a safe place full of security and fulfillment of our needs. Aphrodite/Venus was birthed in the water. Goddess of love and beauty came into being through the alchemy of the liquid realm. We learn through Greek myths that it is the sirens that sing calling the sailors into their watery world; songs also being the realm of the liquid. Water is filled with mystery, the feminine, emotion, the unknown, nurturing, guidance, darkness, a muffling of/escape from sound, and a letting go. If you struggle too much in the water, you could drown. It is better to just float. Water is both safety and danger, at once. A Hegelian dance. Water could have saved that burning building in 1838, yet control was taken over the water, in the end, in the name of justice.

Dubois: Songs, the Water, and Escape.

            Dubois’ concept known as “double consciousness” illustrates this idea of the liminal space. The Black slave cannot escape from the eyes watching and assessing his actions therefore leading to his/her own self-assessment continuously, analogous to the idea that slaves could not escape surveillance and punishment over pretty much anything that they would do. Dubois begins his first chapter called “Of Our Spiritual Strivings” with a song by Arthur Symons:

O water, voice of my heart, crying in the sand,

All night long crying with a mournful cry,

As I lie and listen, and cannot understand

The voice of my heart in my side or the voice of the sea,

O water, crying for rest, is it I, is it I?

All night long the water is crying to me.

 

Unresting water, there shall never be rest

Till the last moon droop and the last tide fail

And the fire of the end begin to burn in the west,

And the heart shall be weary and wonder and cry like the sea,

All life long crying without avail,

As the water all night long is crying to me. (Dubois 1)

 

Dubois continues on to say, “Between me and the other world, there is an unasked question: unasked by some through feelings of delicacy; by others through the difficulty of framing it.” They don’t ask directly, “How does it feel to be a problem?”” (Dubois 1) But this remains unsaid and in the air as a presence through every conversation. Dubois juxtaposes this idea with the entrance poem to show the idea of grief that lies within the watery realm of silence. He uses an apostrophe to start his work, and water is addressed as something that could have the capacity to understand his feelings. The second stanza gives a clue to “why water?” because he sees it as ever present and unending. The rhythms of water continue on indefinitely and can be relied upon to do so. As we cry when we are sad, so water cries in turn. So, for Dubois, to give water his sadness and grief not only will water understand, but water will echo his sadness. He will feel the rhythm of it, like a song, and he pairs this poem with sheet music below it. Unlike when he has a conversation with a white person and the guilt comes up or what is truly important (feelings) go unaddressed, so water can be relied upon to not ignore. The act of creating music is a way through the silence. And to address the water through a song is to make spoken this need. Emotions and water are linked. Grief is an emotion. Sadness creates tears.

            Dubois’ dominant metaphor for the entire work is that of the veil, the ever-present partition that separates African Americans from the world around them, and in doing so separates them from themselves as well.” (Neilson 107) Water could also represent the only place or one of the only places that an individual can escape this veil, as they needed to do during times of slavery. Wilderness and swamps were typical places where slaves would congregate and evade the watching eyes of their masters and overseers. Dubois continuously turns to the sorrow songs in his work which could mean that he is using the songs to create a veil between others who would not understand not only the textual connotations, but the music. He includes sheet music in his text which not everyone would know how to read. These songs create a shield so that they could in freedom express themselves and commune together. “American slaves suffered an extraordinary amount of interference in their daily lives.” (Neilson 108) They had so many rules placed on them, some they weren’t even made aware of, so to consider how oppressive this was, one only has to understand that any motion or sound one makes could be scrutinized or punished leaving their indecipherable markings on their flesh, creating “hieroglyphics of the flesh” (Neilson 108). The surveillance of the masters was similar to Foucault’s panopticon; the slaves would not know when or if they were being watched. So, slaves were forced to meet and engage secretly in order to evade “the eyes”:

In many cases the slaves sang and worshipped in secret, often late at night or very early in the morning when their masters were asleep and when the cloak of darkness would most likely shield them from the prowling patrollers.” (Neilson 111)

 

So, any place where they could find an empty spot that wasn’t being watched became their sanctuary, and this is where slave spirituals began. In essence, these were sung in spaces that were liminal and untouched. Virginal, safe spaces. Song was prevented from being heard by establishing either pots of water in the center of the gathering or wetting clothes and cloaking the space in these. The longing that they felt was recorded in their songs, songs that would not be overheard by the wrong party.

So, “How does it feel to be a problem?”. The slaves would express how this feels, and Dubois when he wrote his book made sure that using the language of slavery and this ever-present reliable water that he would be heard. He put these songs next to poetry from the Anglo-Saxon tradition to make this clear.

“After the Egyptian and Indian, the Greek and Roman, the Teuton and Mongolian, the Negro is a sort of seventh son, born with a veil and gifted with second-sight in this American world-a world which yields him no true self-consciousness, but only lets him see himself through the revelation of the other world.” (Dubois 2)

His experience is second hand experience. Is it any wonder that Dubois focuses on the liminal and the dialectic of opposites in his work? Is it also any wonder that music was the way through for many?

            Dubois did not appreciate this idea of favoring the “white” of Progress, erasing the “black” of the ambiguous past, what is seen as unacceptable needing to be destroyed. To Dubois, a reconciliation needs to happen, not an erasure. A combining of the two was necessary.  “My log schoolhouse was gone. In its place stood Progress; and Progress, I understand, is necessarily ugly.” (Dubois 43) He moves into sorrow as his narration continues, and he emphasizes twilight and dawn as he laments these changes:

“How shall man measure Progress there where the dark faced Josie lies? How many heartfuls of sorrow shall balance a bushel of wheat? How hard a thing is life to the lowly, and yet how human and real! And all this life and love and strife and failure-is it the twilight of nightfall or the flush of some faint-dawning day? Thus, sadly musing, I rode to Nashville in the Jim Crow car.” (Dubois 45)

 

Dubois enters the liminal, ambiguous space between past and future, hope and despair, and a lack of certainty in order to attempt to find the answers to the questions. He is assessing what Reconstruction has done to the cause and the perception of Blacks in society, lamenting the errors made through so much struggle and resistance. He asks: “Well, then what for?” as an echo to ”How does it feel to be a problem?” If they could not voice this simple phrase, or have it asked of them, what was the war for if it would result in such uncertainty?

            What follows next in Chapter V is the metaphor of Atlanta and the idea that all-black and

white- are rising together. This next chapter shows us his hope, but first he must accept despair.

“It is a hard thing to live haunted by the ghost of an untrue dream; to see the wide vision of empire fade into real ashes and dirt; to feel the pang of the conquered, and yet know that with all the Bad that fell on one black day, something was vanquished that deserved to live, something killed that in justice had not dared to die; to know that with the Right that triumphed, triumphed something of Wrong , something sordid and mean, something less than the broadest and the best. All this is bitter hard; and many a man and city and people have found in its excuse for sulking, and brooding, and listless waiting.”  (Dubois 48)

 

Dubois sees clearly that the uncertainty is the result of, not the triumph of Good, but the resulting mixture of consequence: with the good, there resulted so much bad. The polarity of this realization is what led him to the water and the liminal. Only by reconciling these paradoxes could he find a solution. Only by creating a voice that both could and would be heard could they be acknowledged.

Chopin and Aphrodite’s Rise from the Foam

 

Chopin’s novel The Awakening brings us a different perspective of what water can do for us and what water means. Does it give us our bodily ownership back, or does it take it away? Chopin presents us with another paradox, which of course could go either way. Michelle Burnbaum argues that Edna never regained her agency. She only allowed “alien hands” to give her sensuality and the erotic. While maintaining a liminal position, Edna does not acknowledge her innate power over those who she attempts to connect with in the story. Burnbaum writes:

“Alternately awake and asleep-sovereign and subjugated-Chopin’s heroine enacts the paradox of the imperial self who appears to rule while being herself ruled. The unbearable contradictions of being both free agent and yet acted upon is characteristic of the colonizer’s position. And as the myth of self-authorization must involve the erasure of its own authorizing principle, so must Edna repress that which is both the basis for and a threat to her autonomy.” (Burnbaum 303)

 

While Burnbaum’s argument does have merit and would be useful when focused on the marginalized characters in this work and their struggles, what is not acknowledged here is that the colonized would be seeing Edna from their own perspective, not understanding “how it feels to be her” or “How it feels to be a problem?”, not realizing that to be in her shoes they would see that she is also marginalized and so, was looking for a place to belong. The clue is who does she choose to cling to for assurance and belonging? All the non-White characters. Instead of seeing her as a colonizer using people who are below her on the social hierarchy, we could alternatively see her as trying to disregard the unfair and superficial hierarchy that needs to be broken up. Edna could see the truth that it is the relationships that we foster that matter, not an imposed hierarchical structure to give us how we are supposed to behave. What hurt Edna at the end is her realization that her influence was not enough to change things, and would not. Her entrance into the water was her surrender. The relationships that she had formed were too fragile to withstand that structure of power and forced exclusion from not only social space, but even through our own feelings and bonds.

            Sandra Gilbert has referred to Edna as a “mythic metamorphosis” (Gilbert 55), akin to a female Jesus:

“For in creating a heroine as free and golden as Aphrodite, a “regal woman” who “stands alone” and gives herself where she “pleases”, Chopin was exploring a vein of revisionary mythology allied not only to the revisionary erotics of free love advocates like Victoria Woodhull and Emma Goldman but also to the feminist theology of women like Florence Nightingale, who believed that the next Christ might be a “female Christ”. (Gilbert 61)

 

Could it be the only way out for Edna was through death or surrender? It appears to be that way, and the attitude towards race in this novel would only give a partial answer to this question. She did everything right (except for leaving her children which is a different debate and not without cause). She attempted to wrench herself away from the structure she was confined within, the cage of the home was opened up, and it is important to note that it was the male presence in the novel that allowed for her rise out of confinement:

“After Mrs. Pontellier had danced twice with her husband, once with Robert, and once with Monsieur Ratignolle, who was thin and tall and swayed like a reed in the wind when he danced, she went out on the gallery and seated herself on the low window-sill, where she commanded a view of all that went on in the hall and could look out toward the Gulf. There was a soft effulgence in the east. The moon was coming up, and its mystic shimmer was casting a million lights across the distant, restless water.” (Chopin 32)

In the text, this is the pivotal and quite liminal point where she becomes Aphrodite. She “commands” the view over everything. She has multiple men dancing with her. She shows a strong presence over the restless water. Here we see her at her best; where she should have remained had she been simply the figure of Aphrodite. It was her fluctuating emotion that changed things, and the changing tide of societal attitude towards such a strong woman, among even those women who would be most likely to understand her dilemma.  Eventually, she reached the “point of no return”, and like a figure such as Anna Karenina, she couldn’t come back to shore. The best way to assess what this could mean in the scope of water imagery and the liminal is to compare it to Dubois and his use of water as an apostrophe.

 Only water understands. Water is a part of grief and of the emotional, imaginative realm of fantasy and nostalgia for a lost past. It doesn’t really matter if those fantasies or nostalgia had actually existed; they are still very real in the mind of the person who is calling them forth. The slaves found a safe space and used water to increase the safety, and they did it communally, together. Edna is very different. She is utterly alone, so that when she enters the water, she is not safe. She cannot, like Aphrodite, ride the foam because she has surrendered to the water. In a sense, Gilbert is correct when she claims Edna is a Jesus figure, but I don’t think this goes far enough. Gilbert describes Aphrodite as:

“Naked yet immortal, she moves with ease and grace between the natural and the super natural, the human and the inhuman, nature and culture. Golden and decked in gold, she is associated with sunset and sunrise, the liminal hours of transformative consciousness-the entranced hours of awakening and drowsing-that mediate between night and day, dream and reality.” (Gilbert 62)

 

Dubois also talked of twilight and dawn just the same: that liminal realm between the polarity of opposing sides. However, he brings it up as if to say: not all is dark and not all is light. Progress doesn’t mean embracing only the light, but understanding the darkness and accepting it. This is something that Edna fails to do. She wishes to go back to an untouched, virginal past of childhood in order to not accept the darkness. If she had accepted the darkness, she would have become the liminal Aphrodite. The goddess who has agency to change the world of mortal men. Casting herself in the sea was certainly not goddess-like. It may have been Jesus like, and yes, her death paves the way for the New Woman, but it also shows her downfall.  Edna had escaped from the cage and could act in the world with freedom. She had gained that. What she couldn’t do was accept reality.

“It was no coincidence, after all, that Kate Chopin imagined her Venus rising from the foam of a ceremonial dinner party in 1899, the same year that another American artist, Isadora Duncan, was beginning to dance the dances of Aphrodite in London salons…Within a few years, Duncan, haunted by her own birth “under the star of Aphrodite” was to sit for days before the Primavera, the famous painting of Botticelli.” (Gilbert 63)

 

Edna had enthroned herself at the dinner table in gold satin at one point in the novel, but we see this also contrasted with scenes of drowsiness and sleep and wakefulness in a large white bed.  It is crystal clear that Edna had become a mortal version of Aphrodite, but perhaps this is what Chopin is trying to tell us: that Aphrodite is not mortal. Edna could lose her life. Both Dubois and Chopin hit on something very important: how treacherous it was to live in times like these where an entire building could be left to burn, and a woman cast into the sea would not even be noticed. It is a forgetfulness, an ignorance, a casting aside of those who do not belong.

            The liminal was dangerous and uncertain, but it was much preferable to the real and the open and the light, as we see by what happened during the fire of Philadelphia Hall. There is a long tradition of depictions of Aphrodite in the art world, so it is striking to note that during the 1890’s we see depictions in other forms of art. Sandro Botticelli had been forgotten about in the annals of art history until around 1858: “intelligent artistic circles in England were aware of Botticelli at least by 1858, when Lady Eastlake, herself almost suspiciously a la mode in such things, warns a friend about to visit Italy to “try and fill your heart especially with grandeur and earnestness of the great four” quattrocento Florentine figures of whom Botticelli is first.” (Levey 295) His art before that was seen as obscure and of lesser importance, almost odd in appearance. But that was changing in the late 19th century. “In the early 1860’s Burne-Jones’s own vehement love of Botticelli was still something unusual. Nevertheless, by then the public was aware of Botticelli’s existence and his work was being collected. (Levey 299)….But there were serious obstacles to appreciation. There remained unexplained obscurities of subject matter and a violence of emotion which was disturbing, even an ambivalence in the artist’s attitude to what he painted.”(Levey 301) Is it possible that what was being rejected was the liminal and the grey areas that his works seem to call forth? Could this also be the reason why in the 1890’s America, we are seeing literary works calling forth the liminal and therefore calling forth Aphrodite subconsciously in the process? What fears us also drives us forward, and Dubois has pinpointed that fear and the result. William Morris and William Stanhope had both been fascinated by Venus and explored her both in their work and in the admiration they showed for earlier works by Botticelli of Flora and Births of Venus. It was “still a rather esoteric enthusiasm in 1870s” (Poe 56), but at the same time when ideas and paradigms are being called forth, this is done slowly and in a small way without knowledge until later when the trend has almost passed. Lorenzo Medici, patron of Sandro Botticelli had wished for the “Tuscan tongue” to become something “never again be scorned as being poorly ornamented and lacking in richness.” (Dempsey 3), so suffice it to say that Dubois’ use of slave songs in his work was in an analogous way attempting to approach the same formalization in order to raise the level of the art he wished to emphasize. One could argue that both Lorenzo de Medici and W.E.B. Dubois were successful in their efforts, Florentine art and culture becoming high art, and Black culture and music becoming pivotal to the growth of American music and pop culture. And it was through the metaphorical rise of Aphrodite and the liminal that we can track this progress happening. The attachment and attraction to Botticelli tracks the level of change as the idea of the New Woman and The Decadent rise from the foam to the surface. The polarities were now realized, so the paradox could be resolved.

 

Conclusion: The Rise of the New Woman and Black American Culture.

“Eros is what moves us to make connections and therefore leads to the common good: it is the power, the yearning, the hunger, the drive, the YES to the breakdown of the walls that separate person from person, creature from creature, creature from creator; and to the making of the connections between and among us in which we find our common good,” (Hall 96)

 

Cheryl Hall argues convincingly in her book The Trouble with Passion: Political Theory Beyond the Reign of Reason that it is through the erotic that one could resist oppression. Chopin’s novel could have been an example of this had Edna embraced the erotic for what it is: true, singular desire for what is real and a taking ownership of the body through these desires. However, she didn’t remain in the erotic world. She left only to be taken in by the world of illusion and nostalgia that the water her forced her into in the end. We could make an even further argument by saying that it is in this novel that we see the unresolvable paradox of desire vs. illusion, or body vs. fantasy. We wonder what would have happened had she stayed, but that is not important considering when the work was published and what was possible for women at the time, holding profound significance for what was at stake toward the end of the nineteenth century. As Linda Dowling writes:

“When they described their lurid vision of cultural apocalypse, critics of the “New” inevitably adopted what had become a familiar journalistic vocabulary of crisis. Invoking the analogy of the French Revolution, for instance, had by the 1890’s become an almost reflexive rhetorical gesture among journalistic writers, one merely signaling a writer’s urgent dismay or his sense of inevitable, inevitably disastrous consequences. “ (Dowling 437)

 

Given this prevailing atmosphere of crisis, it is no wonder that writers were writing on the line of the liminal. When there is an upheaval in any area there is always this uncertainty present. What we do with this uncertainty had to ability to promote change for either the better or the worse.

“If we smile at the repeated warnings of apocalypse made by critics of the New Woman and the decadent, we nonetheless recognize in their apocalyptic vocabulary a genuinely anguished expression of cultural anxiety, a sense that the new might betoken cultural changes even less comprehensible than those which the constantly recurring images of decline, decay, and end were meant to control.” (Dowling 438)

 

In other words, they were seeing it as a sign that things were about to go downhill very fast. Linda Dowling also brings up in her essay how those heroines of the New Woman Movement consorted with those of the “other “unsavory lower classes”: lower class people and especially the male of the lower classes. Not only did they want to rewrite social imbalances through their cause, but usually this descent was appealing because it represented the simplicity that they cannot re-gain in their lives (just as Edna fantasized about going back to her childhood in her last moments), temporary and was only a brief stint on the journey towards greater sense of self.  (Dowling 442-3) What Dowling does not address, however, is the idea that through the melding of class, this New Woman could create a new category for herself without throwing out what was good in the old system. Not only that, women were able to achieve the sense of the erotic that they could not achieve within high culture and its overly formal system of restrictions. In essence, by creating these connections they were attempting to do what Edna had begun: transgress the unbroken liminality of the age:  to finally break the system that was not working without causing destruction in the process.

            Isn’t that in essence what Dubois was also attempting in his Souls of Black Folk?  “How many heartfuls of sorrow shall balance a bushel of wheat? How hard a thing is life to the lowly, and yet how human and real!”  Why should we forget where we come from (nature, home, roots, the pastoral) through the univocal cause of Progress? That paradox needed to be resolved. Forgetting half of the polarity would be exactly what would lead to despair and eventual destruction. Dubois taught us that. So did Chopin. We cannot embrace only one side of a duality, so we either stay within the liminal or combine the two together to create something completely brand new.

            As Dubois had combined two sides throughout his work (music vs. poems, and moments of simplicity vs. higher thought/reason), so did American culture continue on to resolve those paradoxes presented to us in the 1890’s: African Americans would continue into the future to change the landscape of music through song, stories, and spirituality, and women would rise like Aphrodite to give strength to a whole new generation of women with voices that demanded to be heard and accepted as part of the whole.

Both Black Americans and American women had reclaimed their bodies in the end and would write their own language into the integral American story of the future.

 

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