Fallen woman
"Fallen woman" is an archaic term which was used to describe a woman who has "lost her innocence", and fallen from the grace of God. In 19th-century Britain especially, the meaning came to be closely associated with the loss or surrender of a woman's chastity[2] and with female promiscuity. Its use was an expression of the belief that to be socially and morally acceptable, a woman's sexuality and experience should be entirely restricted to marriage, and that she should also be under the supervision and care of an authoritative man. Used when society offered few employment opportunities for women in times of crisis or hardship, the term was often more specifically associated with prostitution, which was regarded as both cause and effect of a woman being "fallen". The term is considered to be anachronistic in the 21st century,[3] although it has considerable importance in social history and appears in many literary works (see also Illegitimacy in fiction).
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Theological links
The idea that Eve, from the biblical story in the Book of Genesis, was the prototypical fallen woman has been widely accepted by academics,[4] theologians and literary scholars.[5] Eve was not expelled from Eden because she had sex outside of marriage; rather she fell from a state of innocence because she ate forbidden fruit from the Tree of the knowledge of good and evil. That is, Eve and then Adam reached for knowledge, but in reaching for it, they disobeyed God and lost their original innocence, as shown by their sudden awareness of and shame at their nakedness. The temptation offered to Adam and Eve in the story was to know what God knows and to see what God sees. It was a temptation based on covetousness and a desire to be like God. (See: Prometheus) Thus, theologically speaking, there is a metaphor that is related to the Fall of Man from a state of grace as well as to the expulsion and subsequent fall of Lucifer from heaven.
Social situation
The term "fallen" was nevertheless most often conflated with sexual "knowledge" (i.e., experience), particularly for women at a time when the social value of their sexual inexperience was insisted upon. As the term narrowed to imply any socially unauthorized sexual activity, including premarital or extra-marital sex, whether initiated by the woman or not, it concealed the different reasons for such a "falling" out of God's and society's favor. "Fallen" was therefore an umbrella term that was applied to a variety of women in a variety of settings: she may have been a woman who had had sex once or habitually outside the confines of marriage; a woman of a lower socioeconomic class; a woman who had been raped or seduced by a male aggressor; a woman with a tarnished reputation; or a prostitute. Furthermore, prostitution was defined in a range of ways and the "reality was that hard economic times meant that for many women, prostitution was the only way to make ends meet. Many ... were only transient fallen women, moving in and out of the profession [of prostitution] as family finances dictated."[6]
In some cases, a woman may have been regarded as fallen simply because she was educated, eccentric, or elusive. Whatever the case may be, female fallenness as it appears in each of these renderings was the result of a woman’s deviation from social norms, and in turn strongly linked to moral expectations. In the mid 19th century, for example, "For middle-class men seeking to establish a different basis for authority, from that which had been used by the nobility, moral authority became the key issue, evident in the power exercised by a man over the nuclear or bourgeois family and in his ability to regulate women's sexuality through her protection and containment in the domestic sphere."[7]
Female dancers and performers have been regarded as deviating from social norms that expect women to stay away from the male gaze, and hence have been described as belonging to the class of "fallen women". In Europe, women dancers were not socially acceptable and in Arabia, "the unveiled ghawazi, who performed publicly for men, were not respected".[8]
Rescue and rehabilitation
One of the effects of the rapid urbanisation resulting from the Industrial Revolution in England was that a large number of prostitutes were working in the capital, London.[9] This was assumed to be a large problem for the city and for the women themselves. Therefore it prompted many rescue and rehabilitation efforts, especially by middle-class women inspired by religious conviction or egalitarian principles or both.[10] Some people worked on changes to legislation or served on committees to raise funds for charitable initiatives. Josephine Butler, for example, in the context of her efforts against the Contagious Diseases Acts wrote:
You must know there are many good men and women in our country who have devoted their lives to the work of reclaiming prostitutes, and of offering protection and aid to women and young girls, who through poverty, ignorance, or evil companionship are in danger of falling into sin. And because several persons working together can do more than each working alone, societies have been formed for this purpose, one of which, the Rescue Society, has in the last seventeen years, opened the doors of its various Homes to no less than 6,722 fallen women and girls, of which number seventy out of every hundred have been restored to a virtuous life, whilst lack of funds has compelled it reluctantly to refuse admission to many others who implored its aid.[11]
Many of the homes were "strict, punitive and vengeful"[12] but Urania Cottage, set up and managed by Charles Dickens with the help of his rich, philanthropic friend Lady Burdett-Coutts was "more agreeable", run with "good sense and good will."[12]
Most famously, the Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone worked directly with fallen women to try to rescue them from their circumstances. At considerable risk to his political career, Gladstone spent a great amount of his own money and time on this effort, assisted by his wife, Catherine Gladstone. "There are more entries in Gladstone's diaries about prostitutes than there are about political hostesses, more recorded visits to the fallen women on the streets of London than recorded attendances at the balls and soirées of the grandes dames of polite Victorian society."[13]
Rescue work among prostitutes was also part of the missionary work done by the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), whose members also petitioned against alcohol and opium.[14] In a speech to the National Purity Congress in 1895, WCTU temperance campaigner and social reformer Jessie Ackermann said:
From time immemorial we have read of fallen and outcast women, forms of speech used only in reference to our sex. To my mind the time has now come when we should apply the same term to sinful man ... the great weakness of our rescue work in the past has been its onesidedness. It has busied itself in reclaiming women, while men have been passed by.[15]
What "amounted to conventional Victorian 'rescue work' for 'fallen' women" was carried out in the Philippines during the Philippine–American War on behalf of the United States Government as part of a much broader "social purity" campaigns to prohibit prostitution and alcohol and other "social evils".[16]
Fallen women in art and literature
As a genuine social concern as well as a metaphor for artistic explorations of vice and virtue, the theme of the fallen woman has a notable place in art and in literature.[17] In some cases, such as Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Blake, the artist/author has produced companion pieces in both forms. The theme continues in historical fiction such as John Fowles's The French Lieutenant's Woman.
John Milton
What fear I then, rather what know to fear
Under this ignorance of good and evil,
Of God or death, of law or penalty?
Here grows the cure of all, this fruit divine,
Fair to the eye, inviting to the taste,
Of virtue to make wise; what hinders then
To reach, and feed at once both body and mind?"
So saying, her rash hand in evil hour
Forth reaching to the fruit, she pluck'd, she eat.
...
In fruit she never tasted, whether true
Or fancied so, though expectation high
Of knowledge, nor was Godhead from her thought.
John Milton: Paradise Lost Book IX, lines 773–790
[18]
Aside from the Bible, it was John Milton's famous and influential poem Paradise Lost, (1667) that communicated the story of the Fall and its consequences most powerfully. The idea of the fallen woman is most closely related to those sources which represent the fallen woman as an agent, as opposed to a passive receptacle, in the act of her undoing. For example, in "longing to reign rather than serve", Eve is ambitious for knowledge. The difference between these religious renderings of the iconic figure and the fallen woman presented in most 19th century texts is that the latter is suppressed, disempowered, and silenced in her representations: "[T]he Victorian fallen woman is usually depicted ... as a mute, enigmatic icon ... who sleeps through the poem that probes her nature".[19][20]
Lord Byron
Where is honour,
Innate and precept-strengthen'd, 'tis the rock
Of faith connubial: where it is not - where
Light thoughts are lurking, or the vanities
Of worldly pleasure rankle in the heart,
Or sensual throbs convulse it, well I know
'Twere hopeless for humanity to dream
Of honesty in such infected blood,
Although 'twere wed to him it covets most;
An incarnation of the poet's god
In all his marble-chiselled beauty, or
The demi-deity, Alcides, in
His majesty of superhuman manhood,
Would not suffice to bind where virtue is not;
It is consistency which forms and proves it;
Vice cannot fix and virtue cannot change,
The once fall'n woman must forever fall;
For vice must have variety, while virtue
Stands like the sun and all which rolls around
Drinks life, and light, and glory from her aspect.
Lord Byron: Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice, Act II, sc. I, lines 378-398 [21]
Lord Byron uses the idea of the fallen woman to relate vice and virtue and consider the effects of infidelity and inconsistency in his poem Mariano Faliero, Doge of Venice.
William Blake
Does spring hide its joy
When buds and blossoms grow?
Does the sower
Sow by night,
Or the ploughman in darkness plough?
Break this heavy chain
That does freeze my bones around
Selfish! Vain!
Eternal bane!
That free love with bondage bound.
William Blake: "Earth's Answer" (one of the Songs of Experience) lines 16-25 [22]
William Blake's series of poems Songs of Innocence and of Experience (1789-1794) contrasts the two states in the context of industrialising England, the context in which women became more likely to "fall" as a result of great social change. Blake's poetry explores his deep concern about poverty and its effects as well as the relations between those in authority with those who are controlled by it, including moral generalities and the relations between the sexes. The connections between the Fall of Man and societal restrictions on sexual love are part of those broader concerns.
Pre-Raphaelite painters
The theme of the fallen woman was becoming increasingly popular at the time that Rossetti began his picture Found. Conceived in 1851, it was described by Helen Rossetti as follows: "A young drover from the country, while driving a calf to market, recognizes in a fallen woman on the pavement, his former sweetheart. He tries to raise her from where she crouches on the ground, but with closed eyes she turns her face from him to the wall."[23]
William Holman Hunt, like Rossetti a member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, spent some time searching for a 'suitable' subject for his painting The Awakening Conscience and he "found it after reading about Peggotty and Emily in Charles Dickens's novel David Copperfield, and after frequenting the London streets where fallen women could usually be found."[24]
Elizabeth Gaskell
The character of Esther, who becomes a prostitute in Elizabeth Gaskell's novel Mary Barton (1848) is an example of a fallen woman being used to illustrate the social and political divide between rich and poor in Victorian England. The novel is set in a large industrial town in the 1840s and it "gives an accurate and humane picture of working-class life ... Esther is presented as something other than merely a bad girl; the abyss into which she falls is the same gulf that separates Dives from Lazarus".[25] In terms of the construction of the novel, the conventions of the time required that sexual actions took place offstage or not at all. Readers (particularly female readers) were encouraged to imagine and condemn the actions that caused the character's fall but as with other authors concerned about the effects of poverty on people at the time, especially women, Gaskell's "conscious aim is to bring Christian principles as a mediating force within class antagonisms."[26]
Charles Dickens
Aside from the well known critiques of society in his novels such as David Copperfield, (1850), Charles Dickens set up and managed Urania Cottage—a home for homeless women. He disagreed with the prevailing idea that once corrupted, especially by prostitution, and therefore fallen, a woman could not be uncorrupted or redeemed. Rather he wanted to treat them well and train them for other employment but he needed to convince his benefactor that it was possible for fallen women to return to mainstream life.[27]
Thomas Hardy
Thomas Hardy's novel Tess of the d'Urbervilles (1891) explores the consequences for a heroine who became a fallen woman as a result of being raped. This is a key point because the author is trying to show that the consequences are independent of the heroine's actions or intentions.
Fallen women in film
In cinema, the fallen woman is one of the earliest representatives of the female prostitute, and the theme had great appeal during the silent era.[28] By the mid 20th century, when women had access to a variety of jobs and their sexual activity was no longer necessarily associated with moral corruption, the fallen woman as a theme was no longer relevant. The films sometimes intended to convey a moral lesson; sometimes they were a social commentary on poverty; sometimes they explored the idea of redemption or the consequences of coercion; and sometimes they were about self-sacrifice. These contrasts, such as innocence and experience; sin and redemption; vice and virtue, as well as ideas about corruption, class, exploitation, suffering and punishment, build on themes in earlier literature. Some films, such as The Red Kimono (1925) [29] in which the fallen woman was allowed to live happily at the end, were subject to severe censorship.[28] The Road to Ruin (1928)[30] was banned. Protect Us (1914) [31] and The Primrose Path (1931)[32] are films that emphasize the fault of the woman. The Jungle (1914)[33] and Damaged Goods (1919)[34] consider the element of coercion, whereas poverty is important in Out of the Night (1918),[35] The Painted Lady (1924),[36] and Die freudlose Gasse (Joyless Street, 1925), the latter film directed by G. W. Pabst.[37]
References
- Quoted in Stevens, Bethan (2008). The British Museum Pre-Raphaelites. London: The British Museum Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-7141-5066-6.
- Nochlin, Linda (1978). "Lost and Found: Once More the Fallen Woman". The Art Bulletin. 60 (1): 139–153. doi:10.1080/00043079.1978.10787522.
- The Oxford English Dictionary: "A fallen woman"
- For example, Amanda Anderson states "[I]n Augustinian theology, the condition of fallenness derives from the act of original sin" and is thus assumed to be an act reliant upon will: Eve's sexual (or gendered) trespass causes her fall from virtue. Anderson, Amanda (1993). Tainted Souls and Painted Faces. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-2781-7.
- Auerbach, Nina (1982-01-01). Woman and the Demon: The Life of a Victorian Myth. Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674954069.
- Isba, Anne (2006). Gladstone and Women. London: Hambledon Continuum. p. 102. ISBN 978-1-85285-471-3.
- Caine, Barbara; Glenda Sluga (2000). Gendering European History. London: Continuum. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-7185-0131-0.
- Karin van Nieuwkerk, "Changing Images and Shifting Identities: Female Performers in Egypt" in Ann Cooper Albright (2001). Dils, Ann (ed.). Moving History/Dancing Cultures: A Dance History Reader. Durham, North Carolina: Wesleyan University Press. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-8195-6412-2.
- The contemporary estimate of Henry Mayhew (1812–1887) was that there were around 80,000 at a time when the population was about two and a half million. Mayhew, Henry (1861–62). London labour and the London poor: cyclopaedia of the conditions and earnings of those that will work, those that cannot work and those that will not work. London: Griffith, Bohn. OCLC 606160932.
- Steinbach, Susie (2004). Women in England 1760–1914: A Social History. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 127. ISBN 978-1-4039-6754-1.
- reprinted in Jeffreys, Sheila (Ed.) (2001). The Sexuality Debates. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-415-25669-8.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
- Gay, Peter (1986). The Bourgeois Experience: Victoria to Freud Vol II "The Tender Passion". New York and London: W.W. Norton & Company. p. 376. ISBN 978-0-19-503741-8.
- See especially Chapter 6 "Fallen Women" in Isba, Anne (2006). Gladstone and Women. London: Hambledon Continuum. p. 115. ISBN 978-1-85285-471-3.
- Tyrrell, Ian (1991). Woman's World/Woman's Empire: The Woman's Christian temperance Union in International Perspective, 1880–1930. Chapel Hill and London: university of North Carolina Press. p. 110. ISBN 978-0-8078-1950-0.
- Ackermann, Jessie A. "Plan of Work along Social Purity lines" in Aaron Macy Powell The National Purity Congress: Its Papers, Addresses, Portraits American Purity Alliance, 1st National Purity Congress, Baltimore 1895 reprint Edition 1976 p. 333 by Arno Press ISBN 0-405-07474-3 (for complete set) Sheila Mehlman (Ed.)
- Tyrrell, Ian (2010). Reforming the World: The Creation of America's Moral Empire. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. p. 143. ISBN 978-0-691-14521-1.
- Seymour-Smith, Martin (1969). Fallen Women: A Sceptical Enquiry into the Treatment of Prostitutes, their Clients and their Pimps, in Literature. London: Nelson. ISBN 978-0-586-03477-4.
- Milton, John (1966). 'Paradise Lost' in The Complete Poetical Works of John Milton. London: Oxford University Press. pp. 388–389.
- Auerbach, Nina (1982). "The rise of the fallen woman". Women and the demon. Harvard University Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-674-95407-6.
- See also Watt, George (1984). Fallen Woman in the Nineteenth-Century Novel. London: Croom Helm. ISBN 978-0-7099-2781-5.
- Lord Byron (1821). Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice ; an historical tragedy, in five acts, with notes ; The prophecy of Dante : a poem. London: John Murray. Act II, Sc. I, lines 378-398. OL 23317607M.
- Blake, William (1966). Blake - Complete Writings. London: Oxford University Press. p. 211.
- Cited in Hilton, Timothy (1970). The Pre-Raphaelites. New York: Harry N. Abrams. p. 140. ISBN 978-08109-2036-1.
- Hilton, Timothy (1970). The Pre-Raphaelites. New York: Harry N. Abrams. p. 92. ISBN 978-08109-2036-1.
- Kettle, Arnold (1960). "The Early Victorian Social-Problem Novel". In Boris Ford (ed.). The Pelican Guide to English Literature. Middlesex, England: Penguin Books. p. 180.
- Kettle, Arnold (1960). "The Early Victorian Social-Problem Novel". In Boris Ford (ed.). The Pelican Guide to English Literature. Middlesex, England: Penguin Books. p. 179.
- Hartley, Jenny (2008). Charles Dickens and the House of Fallen Women. London: Methuen. ISBN 978-0-413-77643-3.
- Campbell, Russell (1999). "'Fallen woman' prostitute narratives in the cinema". LaTrobe University. Archived from the original on 2011-03-08. Retrieved 2011-12-01.
- "The Red Kimona" – via www.imdb.com.
- "The Road to Ruin" – via www.imdb.com.
- "Protect Us" – via www.imdb.com.
- "The Primrose Path" – via www.imdb.com.
- "The Jungle" – via www.imdb.com.
- "Damaged Goods" – via www.imdb.com.
- "Out of the Night" – via www.imdb.com.
- "The Painted Lady" – via www.imdb.com.
- "The Joyless Street" – via www.imdb.com.