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STRONG
HEROINES
Hallelujah. Bridget Jones, the original chick-lit
heroine who has dominated popular fiction for the past decade
is gone. In place of the neurotic, incompetent, chain-smoking
singleton desperately searching for her Mr. Right, Bridget’s
creator, Helen Fielding has come up with a new creation. Olivia
Joules, her female spy is, according to Fielding’s publicist,
an all-action arse-kicking, man-chewing heroine.
“Post 9/11 the idea of what a woman is
has changed. It’s all about self-reliance and individualism,
making your own decisions and not caring what people think
of you,” she says.
Why has it taken an event as cataclysmic as
the destruction of the Twin Towers to make publishers realise
that women are more than pink-clad twin peaks? Why have we
had a decade of whimpering, whingeing women in fiction when
in real life our sex has gone from strength to strength, licking
boys hollow in exams, powering ahead with careers and achieving
personal and professional heights our mothers could only dream
of? True, there have been a couple of all-action female heroines
around. Sara Paretsky’s female detective, V.I.Warshawski,
has continued to stir up some action in Chicago, as has Janet
Evanovitch’s hilarious bounty hunter, Stephanie Plum,
currently on her ninth adventure and still stringing along
two boyfriends in her native New Jersey. The rising young
British novelist Anna Davis had her third novel, Cheet, about
a promiscuous woman taxi-driver, snapped up for film by Anthony
Minghella, and Terry Pratchett’s feisty witches garner
him an enthusiastic female audience. Yet popular as these
are, neither has achieved the sales or respectability of a
hundred chick-lit heroines, most largely inspired by Helen
Fielding’s original. Even Allison Pearson’s Kate
Reddy, a far more upmarket and literary creation who holds
down a high-powered job in the City as a mother of two, is
ultimately shown as collapsing from the strain.
The irony is that a hundred years ago, the Victorians
were producing far stronger heroines than any modern writers.
What chick-lit heroine can hold a candle to Jane Austen’s
Elizabeth Bennett, who unlike her pale imitation Bridget Jones
stands up to a desirable lover and heaps such witty scorn
on him for his ungentlemanly behaviour that he becomes a reformed
man? Who can match Charlotte Bronte’s formidably defiant
Jane Eyre? What about Marian Halcombe in Wilkie Collins’s
masterpiece The Woman in White? True, she may sport a small
moustache, but she has such fire and courage that even the
villainous Count Fosco is smitten by her charms. Where is
a modern match to Thackeray’s social climber, Becky
Sharp in Vanity Fair, who hurls her school leaving present
from the carriage and transforms herself from impoverished
Bohemian to Society hostess? Not, alas, to be found in Candace
Bushnell’s latest offering.
The reluctance of both literary and popular
novelists to portray heroines who are strong is a mystery,
particularly given the kind of female characters we have seen
in film during the past decade. From Ripley in Alien to Melanie
Griffiths in Working Girl, from Lara Croft to Jinx in the
latest James Bond movie, strong heroines have achieved iconic
status. Disney’s Mulan, Belle in Beauty & the Beast,
Elle in Legally Blonde, John Connor’s mother in Terminator,
Sex & the City and Buffy the Vampire Slayer have all come
marching into our consciousness as admirable, formidable and
sexy. A generation of young women has grown up with the idea
that, like Cat in Ten Things I Hate About You, they can be
smart and tough and still get the most gorgeous guy in the
school.
Yet any author who attempted to portray a strong
heroine in a novel has been likely to get a rough ride. I
know this from personal experience. My first novel, Foreign
Bodies (1990), featured a heroine who was rude to her mother,
ran away from home and lost her virginity. Big deal you might
think – but no. Torrents of critical scorn and hatred
were poured on my head for not creating a heroine who was
sugar and spice and all things nice. Where Martin Amis and
Irvine Welsh were hugely praised for their revolting, drug-taking,
porn-reading heroes, it was an unforgivable transgression
for a woman to portray another woman as even mildly difficult
and adventurous.
The discrepancy between the Victorian heroine
and the modern one was perfectly pointed up by AS Byatt’s
Booker-winning novel, Possession (1990). Where the Victorian
heroine, Christabel la Motte, was a lesbian poet who risked
all to have an affair with her married lover, her descendant
Maude is an academic who keeps her beautiful blonde hair tightly
plaited and hidden away for fear of inciting feminist wrath.
Her timidity is emblematic of the hostility my generation
of women has had persistent trouble with. It isn’t men
who have held us back, but our own terror that assertiveness
is unattractive and unfeminine. That terror has now been routed,
and with it a sub-genre of fiction that has fed women’s
fantasies of passivity. Olivia Joules, your hour has come.
Sunday Times Style magazine, September 2003
Top Five Classic Heroines:
Elizabeth Bennet, Pride & Prejudice, Jane
Austen
Jane Eyre, Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte
Marian Halcombe, The Woman in White, Wilkie Collins
Betsey Trotwood, David Copperfield, Charles Dickens
Becky Sharp, Vanity Fair, William Thackeray
Top Five Modern Heroines:
V.I. Warshawski (series) Sara Paretsky
Stephanie Plum (series)Janet Evanovitch
Cheet (Cheet,) Anna Davis
Cordelia Gray (An Unsuitable Job for a Woman) PD James
Lyra (His Dark Materials) Philip Pullman
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