“We have an origin like water”: The Path towards Femininity in Eavan Boland’s The Journey

Eavan Boland’s poem “The Journey” depicts the dream of a woman, who – just like Inanna, a Sumerian goddess – embarks on the eponymous journey into the underworld, guided by Sappho. At first, she sees nothing in the darkness, yet, having accustomed to it, she observes mothers and children in loving e...

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Main Author: Anna Kisiel
Format: Article
Language:ces
Published: University of Silesia Press 2021-06-01
Series:Postscriptum Polonistyczne
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Online Access:https://www.journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/PPol/article/view/10441
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author Anna Kisiel
author_facet Anna Kisiel
author_sort Anna Kisiel
collection DOAJ
description Eavan Boland’s poem “The Journey” depicts the dream of a woman, who – just like Inanna, a Sumerian goddess – embarks on the eponymous journey into the underworld, guided by Sappho. At first, she sees nothing in the darkness, yet, having accustomed to it, she observes mothers and children in loving embraces: the image which is immediately disturbed by the female’s guide, who makes the persona realise that these people are the victims of an unspecified plague. At this moment, the woman, stricken with terror, notices the signs of sickness and death; among others, she sees infants being poisoned during breast feeding. Sappho stresses that the watched mothers have a lot in common with the speaker – they are all loving and caring, despite their occupation or status, but also despite the tragedy they participate in. In this feminine transfiguration of The Aeneid, the terrified lyrical subject expresses the wish to provide a testimony on their behalf; however, Sappho assures her that she is here precisely in order to gain this knowledge of her genesis. When the woman finally returns to reality, everything remains as it was, but she feels the difference nonetheless; she is deeply affected by the events she has seen. The aim of my paper is to analyse Eavan Boland’s take on the path towards femininity in the context of Bracha L. Ettinger’s matrixial theory. What Ettinger proposes is a supplement to Freudian-Lacanian approach, which makes it possible to conceive of a new, feminine-based, non-binary matrixial difference, grounded upon proximity, hospitality, and exchange instead of a set of separations and the male/female opposition. I will endeavour to prove that Ettingerian psychoanalysis and Boland’s piece, when combined, can unfold the potential of a matrixial journey towards becoming a woman, grounded upon such notions as compassion, fragility, wit(h)nessing, exchange, connectivity, and transsubjective experience, unthinkable from the Oedipal perspective.
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spelling doaj-art-15efcbd164c64d719104300520e3f6882025-08-20T02:13:41ZcesUniversity of Silesia PressPostscriptum Polonistyczne1898-15932353-98442021-06-0127110.31261/https://doi.org/10.31261/PS_P.2021.27.07“We have an origin like water”: The Path towards Femininity in Eavan Boland’s The JourneyAnna Kisiel0WSB UniversityEavan Boland’s poem “The Journey” depicts the dream of a woman, who – just like Inanna, a Sumerian goddess – embarks on the eponymous journey into the underworld, guided by Sappho. At first, she sees nothing in the darkness, yet, having accustomed to it, she observes mothers and children in loving embraces: the image which is immediately disturbed by the female’s guide, who makes the persona realise that these people are the victims of an unspecified plague. At this moment, the woman, stricken with terror, notices the signs of sickness and death; among others, she sees infants being poisoned during breast feeding. Sappho stresses that the watched mothers have a lot in common with the speaker – they are all loving and caring, despite their occupation or status, but also despite the tragedy they participate in. In this feminine transfiguration of The Aeneid, the terrified lyrical subject expresses the wish to provide a testimony on their behalf; however, Sappho assures her that she is here precisely in order to gain this knowledge of her genesis. When the woman finally returns to reality, everything remains as it was, but she feels the difference nonetheless; she is deeply affected by the events she has seen. The aim of my paper is to analyse Eavan Boland’s take on the path towards femininity in the context of Bracha L. Ettinger’s matrixial theory. What Ettinger proposes is a supplement to Freudian-Lacanian approach, which makes it possible to conceive of a new, feminine-based, non-binary matrixial difference, grounded upon proximity, hospitality, and exchange instead of a set of separations and the male/female opposition. I will endeavour to prove that Ettingerian psychoanalysis and Boland’s piece, when combined, can unfold the potential of a matrixial journey towards becoming a woman, grounded upon such notions as compassion, fragility, wit(h)nessing, exchange, connectivity, and transsubjective experience, unthinkable from the Oedipal perspective.https://www.journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/PPol/article/view/10441Bracha L. Ettingermatrixial theoryEavan Bolandmotherhoodbecoming a womansubjectivity-as-encounter
spellingShingle Anna Kisiel
“We have an origin like water”: The Path towards Femininity in Eavan Boland’s The Journey
Postscriptum Polonistyczne
Bracha L. Ettinger
matrixial theory
Eavan Boland
motherhood
becoming a woman
subjectivity-as-encounter
title “We have an origin like water”: The Path towards Femininity in Eavan Boland’s The Journey
title_full “We have an origin like water”: The Path towards Femininity in Eavan Boland’s The Journey
title_fullStr “We have an origin like water”: The Path towards Femininity in Eavan Boland’s The Journey
title_full_unstemmed “We have an origin like water”: The Path towards Femininity in Eavan Boland’s The Journey
title_short “We have an origin like water”: The Path towards Femininity in Eavan Boland’s The Journey
title_sort we have an origin like water the path towards femininity in eavan boland s the journey
topic Bracha L. Ettinger
matrixial theory
Eavan Boland
motherhood
becoming a woman
subjectivity-as-encounter
url https://www.journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/PPol/article/view/10441
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