I Wednesday, May 19, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five I i booksbooksbooks Woman as Eunuch *1-.*k Germaine Greer, THE FE- MALE EUNUCH, McGraw-Hill, By ELLEN PECHMAN The surest guide to the cor- rectness of the path that women take is joy in the strug- i gle . . . Joy does not mean riotous glee. but it does mean the purposive employment of energy in a self-chosen enter. prise. A good deal of recent literature from proponents of the Women's Liberation Movement fails to rise to a level worthy of the serious problems involved. However, some useful and carefully writ- ten statements-among them, Si- mone de Beauvoir's, Second Sex, and Caroline Bird's, Born le-- male-have kept the discussion of the issues at a rational and refreshingly intelligent plane. Happily, Germaine Greer, a thirty-one year old Australian born professor of 17th century English Literature has added an- other book to this list. The Fe- male Eunuch, a lively and au- thoritative analysis of the fe- male, calls upon women to e-- lenge the most basic assumptions about the direction of their lives and to explore all the possibili- ties of what they might be. If women free themselves, Greer maintains, they will ultimately liberate their oppressors. The Female Eunuch aigues that through a distortion of sex- ual relationships, emphasis has been placed on the mystique of a masculine - feminine polarity that has resulted in the astra- tion of women's sexuality. The E female form, conceived as an ideal of the "Eternally Femi- nine," is dressed in frills and curls, pampered, and protected and remade by a society which willfully intervenes in the wom- en's growth processes. The femi- nine object is a thing stripped of sexuality, the most fundamental explorative process, and is there- by castrated of its curiosity. This sexual castration that a woman undergoes from infancy deforms her spirit and mind as well. Sex and sexuality are made the per- ogative of men. Having been de- prived of her sexuality, the "fe- male eunuch" is enclosed in a dubious security blanket of white picket fence dreams, family, and housework. She learns to limit the horizons of her quest and never comes to terms with her Self. Women's creative energy. - an ill-used resource, is convo- luted by constant frustration. It becomes a destructive force that is ultimately transformed into self-abuse and hurled in confu- sion at the woman herself, her friends, her lovers and her fami- ly. ' The pronounced oective of this book is subversion, subver- sion of the recognized and estab- lished societal relationships that dictate peoples lives, binding them through marriage to filial and economic inter-dependencies. By artfully dissecting a number of assumptions made about the female body and the stereotype of the, mythical woman, the au- thor exposes the uncertain foun- dation of the belief that de- pendency and inferiority are either naturally or uniquely fe- male. She sees no reasonable ' justification for the emphasis up- on the differentiation of the sex- es, since at conception the only difference between the male and female body cells is one "tiny" chromosome which is not in fact a sex chromosome. Vigorously she reects demands made upon women to contour, comb and scent their bodies to please others. Predetermined standards of sexual excitement as defined by Masters and Johnson, Ann.' Koedt, and others, ere repudi- ated so that every altenative for individual sexual expression, cani be kept open for possible ex- ploration. Real satisfaction in love making, Greer believes, should be found in people, not- organs. Germaine Greer iL dramatical- ly iconoclastic. the strikes tell- ing blows at unrealistic notions of romance, at middle-class love and marriage, and at the rati-si.- ale of the nuclear family. For her, contemporary attitudes to- ward romance are a "sterile self-deception" which sanctions "drudgery, physical incompe- tence and prostitution" and must therefore be counteracted. The heroic mythology surrounding falling in love and getting mar- ried is traced from feudal litera- ture to the present time where Greer documents the wys in which it still holds firm in spite of the failure of most personal experiences to meet up to the standards of the ideal. Most women who have fol- lowed the direction indicated by the myth (of marriage)h make an act of faith that de- spite day-to-day difficulties they are happy, and keep on asserting it in the face of blat- ant contradiction by the facts, because to confess disappoint- ment is to admit failure and abandon the effort. It never occurs to them to seek the cause of their unhappiness in the myth itself The pressure exerted on wom- en by their role-defined responsi- bility to the modern nuclear family also receives severe criti- cism. Again and again Greer itemizes evidence of the aliena- tion, frustration, and sense of aloneness that is created when people attempt to live up to the demands of exclusive dependen- cies like marriage. In the service of others as wife and mother, the woman loses her own iden- tity. "Obviously," says Gree'', "any woman who thinks in the simplest terms of liberating herself to enjoy life and create expression for her own poten- tial cannot accept such a role." Unforutnately, the alternative Greer offers for the family mere- ly replaces one impractical anl unworkable situation for a fan- tasy of another. She proposes an organic family in which child and adult societies would be free to "merge" with one another "in Further Suggestions Caroline Bird, Born Female, Pocketbook, 95c. Simone de Beauvoir, The Sec- ond Sex, Bantam, $1.25. Robin Morgan, editor, Sister- hood is Powerful, Vintage, $2.45. Judith M. Bardwick, Psy- chology of Women, Harper & Row, $7.95. Shulasmith Firestone, Dialec- tic of Sex, William Morrow, $6.95.- M a r y Ellmann, Thinking About Women, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, $2.65. Kate Millett, Sexual Politics, Doubleday, $7.95. Lisa Hobbs, Love and Libera- tion, McGraw-Hill, $5.95. Sookie Stambler, Women's Liberation: -Blueprint for the' Future, Ace Paperbacks, 95c. Cynthia Fuch Epstein, Wo- man's Place, University of Cali- fornia Press, $2.45. conditions of love and personal interest." Children would be placed in the hands of those peo- ple in a community to whom child rearing is a chosen way of life rather than a necessary con- dition of existance, thus avoid- ing the present situa'ion where the parents' neuroses are trans- ferred to their children. Greer emphasizes that the family al- ternative she suggests is not an institutionalized baby farm, but rather a harmoniously linked community where parents and children would have a multitude of roles to choose from. The or- ganic family would free both children and parents from the responsibilities of being exten- sions of one another. Each fami- ly member would be -ecure in the understanding that no one was performing out of a sense of obligation. While an organic f arai!y of non-dependent relationships cer- tainly has much to say for it, Greer does not successfully spell out her plan. To some extent she is developing a Utopian construc' in which beings behave ration,l- ly, carefully considering them- selves and others before taking any action. In this reviewer': opinion, there is no evidence that people will naturally ex- press such benevolence and ra- tionality. The organic family is- mains still a blissful dream. Greer's real contribution here ,s her superb criticism of current family patterns and if her specu- lations are somewhat unsatisfac- tory, they nonetheless provide an encouraging beginning in the search for alternative family structures. One of the most devastating and no doubt controversial sec- tions of this book jeals with hatred. Here Greer presents a gloomly display of the ways in which misdirected creative ener- gies in women are released. Powerfully argued chapters on 'Loathing and Disgust," 'Abuse," "Misery," and "ie-- sentment," document at length the effects of perverted and hypo- critical love relationships which are built upon a fallacious hope for security-the security of de- pendency rather than individual- ism; the security which is found in a denial of life, a hopelessly unattainable goal in the modern world. Mutual exploitation pat- terns of male-female associations are also ruthlessly exposed. Greer shows how the hatred generated by arbitrary assump- tions made about the way wom- en should look, act, and behave wreaks havoc on relationships between-men and women and be- tween women and women. It is no surprise to find that the "fe- male revolt takes curious and torturous forms, and the great- est toll is exacted by the woman upon herself." Finally, The Female Eunuch examines the rebellion that has characterized women's recent responses to the unacceptable roles society has dealt them. In a book that is surprisingly crit- ical of various liberationists' ap- proaches, the reader is present- ed with a sense of the chaos that has characterized much of the Movement's literature and many of its activities. Greer challenges Betty Friedan for be- ing representative only of ."the cream of American middle-class womanhood," and for trying to provide equal opportunity with- in an unsatisfactory status quo. She indicts the radical feminists for being caught up in polemi- cal banter'which Is too academ- ic for most women, adding that they have mistakenly adopted "male kinds of groups and or- ganizational structures." While Germaine Greer stands aloof from any single group or philosophical position, she nev- ertheless supports the efforts each woman chooses to make on her own behalf. S h e councils that the first exercise of a free woman is to devise her o w n mode of revolt, a mode which will reflect her own indepen- dence and originality. In spite of her critical evaluation of the activities of women's groups, sh e is encouraged to observe that the "new feminism" is re- ceiving ever broader support from the most conservative to the most radical sectors of so- ciety. Greer's real hope for women is that having challenged the assumptions upon which their lives have been built, and hav- ing examined the circumstanc- es of their condition, they will set about to bring a revolution- ary change in those conditions. She looks forward to the time when women will refuse to con- tribute to the societal constructs that repress them. They must bring about what Greer sees as a "genuine revolution" which redefines traditional concepts of work, p1 a y, and interpersonal relationships. Women must use their creative energies to devel- op a system which does not al- low itself to adopt the arrogant and aggressive methods of their oppressors. Women must join in cooperatives to support one an- other's struggle. They must stop deifying violence from karate to football to war; they must no longer clothe and masquerade themselves for the pleasure of others; they must reject snar- riage and those who are already married, must reestablish t h e terms of their marriages to meet their real needs. Women 'ust dare to be eccentric, pervecsc, determined, and selfish, w it h the clear objective of seeing that they are "emancipated from helplessness and walk freely upon the earth that is their birthright." The Female Eunuch presents a sensitive and complete argu- ment for an inevitable and nec- essary revolution in attitudes towards women. Qui te a dis- tance is covered in a relatively brief volume and tome -readers may be disturbed by the brevity of aspects that are of particular interest to t h e m. Objection might also be raised to the se- vere criticism that is levied at women themselves. But careful reading will reveal that a firm belief in women enables Greer to be ruthlessly honest and to hold out the highest of expecta- tions: It is up to women to devel- op a form of genuine woman- power . . . to devise a moral- ity which does not disqualify her from excellence, an d a psychology which does not condemn her to the status of spiritual cripple. T h e penal- ties for such delinquency may be terrible for she must ex- plore the dark without any guide. It may seem at first that she merely exchanges one mode of suffering for anoth- er, one neurosis for another. But she may at least claim to have made a definite choice which is the first prerequisite of moral action. She may nev- er herself see t h e ultimate goal, for the fabric of society is not unraveled in a single lifetime, but she may state it as her belief and find hope in it. The Female Eunuch speaks to men as well as to women with passionate sympathy and fer- vent anger. Its sophisticated ex- amination of the female comes from a wise woman who insists upon individual self expression, and, is herself an example. The Female Eunuch is both a per- sonal statement as well as a catalogue of the issues and ar- guments raised by supporters of the Women's Liberation Move- ment. While much of the state- ment made here nas been made before, and while the problems pondered here have been pon- dered before, the contribution of Germaine Greer in The Female Eunuch is that it says it again, but this time, with striking vi- tality, sensibility and coherence. Today's writer . . Ellen Pechman, a research assistant in the school of natural resources, is currently working. on gaming-stimulation. She is .alo a former elemenaiy scol teacher and an active partici- pant in women's liberation,