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Representations of Women & Nature in the 1890s Patriarchal Culture

Harpreet Natt

Ryerson University

Introduction to The Yellow Book and Its Representations of Women and Nature

Front Cover
Front Cover of Volume 3
Aubrey Beardsley
During the Victorian period, and in The Yellow Book, representations of women associated with nature were abundant. The Yellow Book allowed contributor’s from different backgrounds to present varying ideals of beauty and nature under a quarterly literary periodical. Therefore, the illustrated magazine can be seen as a reflection of the ideals of beauty and nature in the Victorian period.

Frederick Greenwood’s non-fiction text “Women- Wives or Mothers,” which was published in the third volume of The Yellow Book in 1894, is one example of a representation of women associated with biological nature. An image of the front cover of the third volume of The Yellow Book can be seen to the left of this text. On the other hand, D.Y. Cameron’s visual art, “The Butterflies,” which was published in the tenth volume of The Yellow Book in 1896, is an example of a representation of women associated with physical nature. An image of the front cover of the tenth volume of The Yellow Book can be seen to the right of this text.

Using primary sources such as reviews and secondary sources which discuss ideals of beauty and nature, I will show how my chosen image and text relate to the representations of women and nature in the 1890s patriarchal culture and relate these to the production and reception of The Yellow Book volumes that I am working with.
Front Cover
Front Cover of Volume 10
J. Illingworth Kay

Ideals of Beauty in the 1890s Patriarchal Society

Hoffman-Reyes states that, “Victorians inherited many of their fundamental ideas about beauty from eighteenth-century aesthetic philosophy” (23). She references Burke, who says the most beautiful part of a woman was thought to be around the area of her “neck and breasts.” The “smoothness and softness” of a woman’s body were more important than inner values such as wisdom because these inner values would fail to attract men (22). If women were trained to remain quiet and submissive, and they believed their purpose was to remain this way, men would benefit as their views would not be questioned. Patriarchal systems limit the options women have to a set of criteria which benefit those who are in power (Ledbetter 16).

Women were being shown as more than simply models of ideal domesticity and physical beauty by the end of the century (Ledbetter 156). The New Woman ideals were trying to transform these traditional ideas of femininity (56). To the right is an image titled “The Middlesex Music Hall” by Walter Sickert, which is located in volume five of The Yellow Book. This image is a representation of a woman who could be seen as the New Woman because she is breaking away from the spheres women were traditionally restricted to. She is standing on a stage with half opened curtains behind her. She appears to be holding an instrument. Though some progress was being made to shift dominant ideas of beauty and nature from a feminist standpoint, many representations of women and nature in The Yellow Book and elsewhere, including Greenwood’s and Cameron’s, were still heavily rooted in the patriarchal culture of the Victorian Era .
The Middlesex Music Hall
The Middlesex Music Hall
Walter Sickert

Representations of Women & Nature in the 1890s Patriarchal Culture

Harpreet Natt

Ryerson University

Representations of Women and Nature in The Yellow Book: Greenwood and Cameron

Both Cameron and Greenwood essentialize women and nature in some way, but whereas Cameron’s emotional essentialism is celebratory and less restrictive, Greenwood’s biological essentialism limits and rejects the opportunities of women. Before analyzing this image and text closely, it is important to note that nature can have many different meanings. Nature includes physical items which grow out of the earth, such as those found in the forest, and it also includes the biological advantages and limitations between men and women that govern the human body. Moreover, nature is a “mental construct that relies upon social consensus for validity” (Gates 11). The ideas which are drawn out of physical and biological nature, though not existing “naturally,” and are therefore man-made, are still a part of nature.

The Butterflies
The Butterflies
D.Y. Cameron
Cameron

To the left of this text is D.Y. Cameron’s “The Butterflies,” which falls under the genre of visual art. “The Butterflies” is a pen and ink image of a woman in nature surrounded by butterflies. Cameron’s images were highly regarded, which is seen when a reviewer says that volume 10 of The Yellow Book, where this image is located, would not have been received well without two of Cameron’s drawings (Yellow and Green). To the right, is another one of Cameron’s pen and ink drawings, titled "Vanity." The drawing is of a woman who is holding a decorative mirror. Similar to “The Butterflies,” there are three butterflies surrounding her. It is interesting to note that Cameron’s primary work was that of etching and most of his works featured architectural subjects such as old shops. In his later years, he focused on landscapes, such as mountains (Willsdon). These two pen and ink images are unique in their production and subject in comparison to Cameron’s other works.

The woman represented in “The Butterflies” is wearing a dress with a low neckline and a heavy ruffled skirt. There are bows attached to the arms of the dress and the back of the skirt. Her hair is tied up in a bun with a flower in it. There are four butterflies flying around her and she is holding a bouquet of flowers. The woman in the image is being placed in nature, which is seen through the fact that there is a flower in her hair, she is holding flowers and there are butterflies surrounding her. The woman is a part of the physical nature which surrounds her, and therefore, just like flowers and butterflies, serves to be decorative and an object to be admired for physical beauty.
Vanity
Vanity
D.Y. Cameron
Picture
Associating women with nature in this celebratory fashion, where the woman is presented to be as beautiful and as free as the butterflies, has the effect of ascribing emotional essences to women. Emotional essences include compassion and intuitiveness (Gates 12). The butterflies which surround her, the flower in her hair and the flowers in her hands, force the viewer of the image to confer the attributes of these flowers and butterflies onto the woman. Butterflies have short lives and so do flowers, but the effect they have on humans is still satisfying (Ledbetter 83). Because flowers and butterflies are short-lived, we have a sort of compassion and pity towards them. Flowers and butterflies are simple creatures which do not have opinions, but we adore them because of their physical beauty. This sort of pity and compassion is felt for the woman as well.

Moreover, animals, cannot make their own decisions. A dominant Victorian view was that women, being almost animalistic, needed to be controlled, watched or looked after (Gauld 39). By placing the woman near butterflies, the woman is seen as one who needs to be looked after or is in need of some sort of charity. Typically, children (as well as animals) are seen as ones who need caring and charity, so there is a connection being drawn between the characteristics used to describe children and women. These characteristics include but are not limited to, softness, innocence, forgiveness, and free spirits.
Picture
Greenwood

A different representation of women, one that restricts women instead of celebrating them, is Frederick Greenwood’s text “Women- Wives or Mothers,” which falls under the genre of criticism. To the left is a painting of Frederick Greenwood by Carlo Pellegrini, which I was kindly given permission to use from the National Portrait Gallery of London under the Creative Commons license. Greenwood’s text, which is located in volume 3 of The Yellow Book, was not received well, as it was called “amateurish” and “flimsy” (Rev. of The Yellow Book 3). Greenwood was an influential editor during his time (Dekkers), showing that the reason his text did not receive a warm reception was because he published it pseudonymously under “By a Woman.” The reviewer was biased against women, showing the publishing system of reception was patriarchal during the Victorian Era. However, Greenwood was also biased against women, which is shown through the meaning of his text but more importantly, through the production of the text. By publishing pseudonymously under “By a Woman,” Greenwood wanted to make his constricting and conservative views seem like the norm. He wanted readers, and other contributors to The Yellow Book, which included women, to see that if women also felt they should function only in relation to men, then it must be true.

“Women- Wives or Mothers” claims that all women can be placed into one of two categories, wives or mothers. This text enforces the idea that women’s entire lives are dictated by biology, either as sexual partners for men or mothers for their children. This text describes women as being molded by nature and those that are wives (not mothers) are described as “beautifully marked specimens.” Describing women as “beautifully marked specimens” seems as though Greenwood is talking about women as if they are butterflies or objects for him to collect and display. This relates to Cameron’s image which has butterflies in it, however Cameron is looking at nature in more of a positive way, because women are presented to be as free as butterflies.

Greenwood’s text focuses on using nature to ascribe biological, instead of emotional, essences to women. Biological essences include menstruation and pregnancy (Gates 12). The categories of wives and mothers are biological because they are determined by biological attributes. A wife provides sexual pleasure for a husband and a mother produces children for her husband. According to Hoffman-Reyes, women’s place in society came from their “biological evolution” because they had to stay home to “conserve their energy” (20). Emphasizing biological differences between men and women is a kind of biological determinism which places women closer to nature. Furthermore, Greenwood states in his text that women are molded by nature.

At the end of his text, Greenwood refers to both “mother-women” and “wife-women” as primitive women. This is another example of Greenwood attributing biological essences to women by labeling them according to their ability to reproduce or become pregnant. According to Gauld, “By the end of the 19th century then, it was generally agreed that by their ability to procreate women were closer to the animal” (37). Greenwood is drawing comparisons between animals and women, through a biological essence, which is that both can procreate.
Picture
Frederick Greenwood by Carlo Pellegrini
National Portrait Gallery, London

Representations of Women & Nature in the 1890s Patriarchal Culture

Harpreet Natt

Ryerson University

Problematizing Representations of Women and Nature in The Yellow Book:

Cameron and Greenwood both essentialize women, whether it is emotional or biological. This is problematic because according to Barthes, "thinking in essences underpins bourgeois mythologies of human kind” (Gates 12). Greenwood states that a woman cannot be both a wife and mother in his text. If a woman is a “mother-woman,” the husband has to accept it because she will not be able to become a "wife-woman," which is the ideal for any husband. As we know today, different categories of people, such as men and women, do not have intrinsically different dispositions. Greenwood also states that, “Wisdom and foresight are never the attributes of the wife-woman” (Greenwood). The fact that Greenwood believes there are certain attributes which belong to women, shows how deep his essentialist view is rooted. Confining certain groups to restrictions is a kind of oppression which can lead to disastrous results, including, but not limited to, depression and anxiety.

The Yellow Book has many different examples of women positioned in nature, and Greenwood’s text seems to be on the extreme negative end of these representations, where women’s only importance is in relation to men. Women exist to serve men through being wives or mother’s, there is no other function for them according to his view. However, though it may appear that Cameron’s representation of women and nature is at the positive end, just like Greenwood, Cameron looks at women as objects that exist to serve some sort of purpose for men. Women, though as free as butterflies, are to be admired for their beauty and exist for decorative purposes. This is problematic because “Art beautifies life, making woman more beautiful in art than reality” (Ledbetter 148). Representations such as Cameron’s, place unrealistic expectations on women and were the catalyst for feminist works that began to appear in The Yellow Book during the later years of the book's production.
Picture

Conclusion

Title Page
Title Page of Volume 1
Aubrey Beardsley
There is a long tradition of women being linked to nature in the 1890s context, which is why there are many varying representations of women and nature found in The Yellow Book. Some representations, such as the title page of Volume 1 where a woman is seen standing in a field playing the piano, are more playful, as there is an artificial element linked to a natural element. Refer to the image to the left of this text. Other representations, such as “Gossips,” celebrate nature, showing that both women and nature have an admiration for one another. Nature provides a safe place for women to discuss their thoughts. Refer to the image to the right of this text. Even though The Yellow Book has numerous representations of women and nature, Cameron and Greenwood are specifically examining physical and biological nature through an essentialist lens.

Examining the numerous representations of women and nature in The Yellow Book allows us to understand the ideologies that existed around beauty during the 1890s. Because there are so many representations of women and nature in The Yellow Book, some that even contradict one another, new information and research surrounding the worldviews of The Yellow Book contributors and those that lived in the Victorian period will continuously be discovered.
Gossips
Gossips
A.S. Hartrick

Copyright Statement

Images in this online exhibit are either in the public domain or being used under fair dealing for the purpose of research and are provided solely for the purposes of research, private study, or education.

Representations of Women & Nature in the 1890s Patriarchal Culture

Harpreet Natt

Ryerson University

Works Cited

Cameron D.Y. "The Butterflies." The Yellow Book 10 (July 1896): 220. The Yellow Nineties Online. Ed. Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra.  Ryerson University. Web. 16 Nov. 2015. http://www.1890s.ca/HTML.aspx?s=YBV10_cameron_butterflies.html

Dekkers, Odin. “Frederick Greenwood.” Dictionary of Nineteenth-Century Journalism. The Nineteenth Century Index, 2009.    
Proquest. Web. 14 Nov. 2015.

Gates, Barbara T. Kindred Nature: Victorian and Edwardian Women Embrace the Living World. Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1998. Print.

Gauld, Nicola. “Victorian Bodies: The wild animal as adornment.” The British Art Journal 6.1 (2005): 37-42. JSTOR. Web. 17 Nov. 2015.

Greenwood, Frederick. "Women—Wives or Mothers." The Yellow Book 3 (Oct. 1894): 11-18. The Yellow Nineties Online. Ed. Dennis Denisoff and     Lorraine Janzen Kooistra. Ryerson University, 2010. Web. 16 Nov. 2015. http://www.1890s.ca/HTML.aspx?s=YBV3_greenwood_women.html

Hoffman-Reyes, Lisa. "Subversive Beauty: Victorian Bodies of Expression." California: ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 2014.    
Web. 17 Nov 2015.

Ledbetter, Kathryn. British Victorian Women’s Periodicals: Beauty, Civilization and Poetry. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009.    
Print.

Rev. of The Yellow Book 3. The Saturday Review 27 Oct. 1894: 469. The Yellow Nineties Online. Ed. Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra.     Ryerson University, 2010. Web. 15 Nov. 2015. http://www.1890s.ca/HTML.aspx?s=review_v3_saturday_review_ oct_1894.html

Willsdon, Clare A. P.. "Cameron, D. Y.." Grove Art Online. Oxford University Press. Oxford Art Online. Web. 16 Nov. 2015.    
http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/article/grove/art/T013432

"Yellow and Green." Rev. of The Yellow Book 10. National Observer 15 August 1896: 393-4. The Yellow Nineties Online. Ed. Dennis                         
Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra. Ryerson University, 2010. Web. 14 Nov. 2015. http://1890s.ca/HTML.aspx?    s=review_v10_national_observer_15_aug_1896.html