The Rhetoric of the Body from Ovid to Shakespeare.
Jones, Ann Rosalind
Cambridge: Cambridge University press, 2000
Lynn Enterline begins this book with an exhilaratingly intelligent
and subtle reading of what she calls "misfirings" in
Ovid's treatment of bodily violence, voice, and poetic composition
in the Metamorphoses. Looking at what happens to figures such as
Actaeon, Orpheus, and Philomela, whose experience of physical attack
leads to a shattering loss of identity and speech, she argues that such
episodes reveal the instability of any speaking self: we speak languages
already given; our words fail to capture our states of mind; we can be
only what other people see and hear us as being. Starting from this
deconstructive and psychoanalytic assumption about the instability of
any speaking subject, Enterline analyzes the ways that Ovid and later
writers, including the Shakespeare of Lucrece and The Winter's
Tale, identify with characters silenced by bodily trauma. She argues
that poets, by speaking for and through female victims of violence and
rape and through violated male figures such as Actaeon and Orpheus,
reveal the fragility of their own gendered identity and the
undependability of public eloquence.
According to Enterline's focus on wordlessness as the theme
and situation linking Ovid to his followers, Petrarch provides obvious
analogies to Ovid. Invoking Echo and Philomela, dramatizing his own
frightening metamorphoses and paralyzed speech, he speaks through Laura
even as he represents her silencing him. Enterline offers vivid readings
of Petrarch as Actaeon, Pygmalion, and Orpheus, and argues that his
fascination with Medea reveals an unconscious recognition of the
feminine and maternal energies repressed but not finally contained in
language. In contrast, she uses John Marston's Metamorphosis of
Pygmalion's Image to exemplify a familiar and less complex shoring
up of masculinity: Marston, silencing Pygmalion's statue by denying
her even the name Ovid gives her, identifies with the manipulations and
triumph of the sculptor as much as he satirizes them. And he establishes
a homoerotic intimacy with his readers, inviting them to side with him
against women in general from a rhetorical position structurally
identical to the one Freud identifies as enabling the dirty joke: a
male-male exchange excluding the woman at whose expense the story is
told. Marston's satire of Pygmalion-like love poets, then, misfires
because he is unconsciously and professionally implicated in the
language and gender-affirming processes he shares with such writers.
Turning to Shakespeare's Lucrece, Enterline takes issue with
critics who have argued that the poet, as narrator of the rape, occupies
a position similar to Tarquin's. Rather, she argues, the poet
shares Lucrece's lack of a language adequate to prevent or describe
her rape. Like Lucrece and Petrarch, exiled from language as is Actaeon,
Shakespeare can represent such suffering only by naming the inadequacy
of language to express it ("sorrow ... blown with wind of
words") and by calling, through Lucrece, upon heroines given voice
by Ovid (Hecuba, Philomela). Enterline pursues this line in a strikingly
original reading of The Winter's Tale, linking Hermione to Lucrece
through her silencing by Leontes and her final address not to men at
court but, Demeter-like, to her refound daughter Persephone/Perdita.
However briefly, women call to women in a solidarity unavailable to male
poets and heroes isolated by bodily and linguistic trauma.
Enterline's argument is sustained through persuasive close
reading as well as a wide range of references to contemporary theorists
such as Kristeva, Felman, and Zizek, as well as Derrida and Lacan.
Shakespeareans will learn much that is new from her radically
pessimistic view of "the English Ovid's" sense of
language as repressive training ground and threat to autonomy in Lucrece
and The Winter's Tale. Though her interpretations are complex, she
presents them in clear, forceful prose, enlivened by a sense of
discovery. And though the split subject central to poststructuralist
theory seems to have no history (we are all always already exiled from
any possible selfhood by the gendered strictures of language), Enterline
glances in interesting ways at the training of schoolboys and poets in
Shakespeare's England, siting her commentary on Lucrece and The
Winter's Tale in a specific time and place.
One might take issue with her claim that these poets can be read in
a feminist way: a male poet who ventriloquizes women may speak less in
sympathy with them than with himself, and the dramatization of
speechlessness can produce powerful alternative forms of speech.
Enterline overuses the pedagogical imperative: she commands her readers
to "notice," "recall," and "consider" to a
degree surprising in a study so attentive to the coercive force of
language. But her study breaks new ground in many ways. By challenging
readers to recognize the misfirings of poetic intent as an inevitable
consequence of writing in a culturally gendered body, The Rhetoric of
the Body rewrites Ovidian literary history in an original and
stimulating way.
ANN ROSALIND JONES is Esther Cloudman Dunn Professor of Comparative
Literature at Smith College. She is the author (with Peter Stallybrass)
of Renaissance Clothing and the Materials of Memory (2000); and of
Currency of Eros: Women's Love Lyric in Europe, 1540-1620 (1990);
and has edited (with Margaret F. Rosenthal) Poems and Selected Letters
by Veronica Franco (2002).