Thursday, September 28, 2017

Brett and Jake's Relationship

Jake and Brett’s relationship is something we have discussed over and over again, and never completely figured out. Nonetheless, the relationship has a major part in the plot of The Sun Also Rises.

To start out, consider the two parallel scenes at the beginning and ending of the novel. In the original taxi scene, Jake asks Brett, “Isn’t there anything we can do about it,” referring to their non-sexual, romantic yet unromantic, relationship (Hemingway 34). At this point, as reader, we have only just met Brett, and it seems the traditional gender roles have been switched, with Brett as the “masculine player” and Jake as the girl who is trying to turn a one-night stand into a relationship (I am referring to the stereotype of the clingy girl with the player boy, regardless of the fact that Brett and Jake have not had a one-night stand).

In this scene, it seems to me that they have both resigned themselves to this open relationship, but at the same time, they both hope a committed relationship could at some point be successful. When Jake asks Brett if there is anything they can do, her response, “I don’t want to go through that hell again,” seems to imply that they have tried previously and failed (34). These failed attempts have convinced Brett that she cannot have a working relationship with Jake. Simultaneously, however, Brett’s repeating the statement that it’s the way she is, seems to suggest she is trying to convince herself as well as Jake. In my opinion, throughout the entire novel, Brett makes excuses for why she can’t be with Jake because she is scared to commit to a single person. We hear about what happened with her first husband, and it makes sense that this would have scarred her. So, when Jake asks her in the beginning if they could be together, she talks about how she would cheat on him with everyone, and how it would never work.


However, by the end of the book, following several situations in which Brett and Jake’s relationship suffers from her relationships with others (despite the fact that Brett and Jake are only officially friends), it seems like Brett is more open to having a relationship with him. She seems to view him in a better light than the other men (Cohn, Romero), having said he wouldn’t act as badly as they had, and in the final chapter when they are in the taxi, it is Brett who asks Jake about the nature of their relationship. It is not framed as a question, but rather a solemn, hopeful statement. It is hard to tell if Jake is open to a committed relationship at this point, as he responds “Yes. . . Isn’t it pretty to think so?” in regards to her statement about how good their relationship might have been (250). The use of the present tense in his statement seems to imply that he has given up on such a relationship existing, but I suspect, if The Sun Also Rises was to continue another few chapters, Brett and Jake would form a relationship, if not at least grow a lot closer.

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Is Clarissa's Marriage to Richard an Act of Defiance Against the Patriarchy?

During the first panel presentation on Monday (9/11) we discussed how Woolf’s characters fight the patriarchy. Specifically, we discussed whether or not Clarissa marrying Richard and rejecting Peter was a direct hit against the patriarchy.

Personally, I do not think it was. First of all, from Clarissa’s perspective, it does not seem as though her actions are planned as a rebellion, but more importantly, I don’t believe Peter’s personality and lifestyle really fit the patriarchal mold.

From the beginning of the novel, Peter does not seem to match the “proper man” of the time. Sure, he has “nothing but the manners and breeding of an English gentleman,” as Clarissa describes him, but he also “married a woman met on the boat going to India” and has an odd habit of opening and closing his pocket knife (Woolf 6,8,39). Additionally, Peter, like Septimus, seems to lack the confidence and masculinity needed to succeed in the patriarchal world.

Also, similarly to Septimus, Peter does not bother hiding his emotions to match the stoically masculine image of a man. The section where this is the most noticeable is when he tells Clarissa he is in love with Daisy. “‘Millions of things!’ he exclaimed, and, urged by the assembly of powers which were now charging this way and that and giving him the feeling at once frightening and extremely exhilarating. . . he raised his hands to his forehead” (Woolf 43). In this situation, Peter is seemingly overcome by emotion and does not try to hide it (though one could, of course, say it is due to his familiarity with Clarissa).

On the other hand, Richard seems to be the perfect example of a polite, successfully masculine man. He is a politician, “happily” married for at least 18 years, invited out to lunch by a very politically active General’s great-granddaughter, and, possibly most importantly, he is rich. He is “made of much finer material,” as Lady Bruton says, though she is comparing him to “the admirable Hugh” (Woolf 101,5).

It seems to me, that, out of all the characters in the novel, other than maybe Hugh, Richard bears the largest resemblance to the proper patriarchal man. For this reason, I think it absurd that Clarissa would be fighting the patriarchy by marrying Richard. Quite the opposite, in fact, in my opinion, by marrying Richard and rejecting Peter, Clarissa is relinquishing her life to the patriarchy. There is no doubt in my mind Woolf has strong opinions on the patriarchal society as well as many other aspects of life depicted in “Mrs. Dalloway” and it would definitely be interesting to explore further whether Woolf intended to have Clarissa side with the patriarchy when she narrated her choice of Richard over Peter.