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IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS)

Volume 20, Issue 12, Ver. IV (Dec. 2015) PP 75-79


e-ISSN: 2279-0837, p-ISSN: 2279-0845.
www.iosrjournals.org

Aunt Jennifer: A victim of patriarchal society and a persona


evolving consciousness of modern women - A study based on
Adrienne Rich's poem Aunt Jennifer's Tigers
Dhanya G
(Assistant Professor, Department of English,Vignan Pharmacy College,Guntur, AndhraPradesh, India- 522213)

Abstract : This paper aims at to study how women are silenced in the male- dominated society, a topic that has
great relevance even in this twenty- first century. To pursue the study I have chosen Adrienne Richs poem Aunt
Jennifer's Tiger. Rich, in her poem, has explored the mechanisms of the male domination and 'patriarchy' that
exists in the society. Adrienne Rich, a poet from marginalized communities reacts towards the dominating
nature that forms the mainstream society. Rich saw poetry as a keen-edged beacon by which womens lives and
consciousness could be enlightened. The poem is an eye- opener to re-construct the identity of the women as it
was before being distorted by the phallocentric ideology. The poet examines women's positions in a
conventional society, and strongly argues for restructuring identity and, rewriting the norms that result in en-
visioning a new world to come.
Keywords: Aunt Jennifer, Tigers, Patriarchy, gender, disempowered

I. Introduction
Adrienne Rich was one of those major twentieth-century intellectuals. She was a poet, critic and a
scholar of towering reputation and rage, whose work distinguished by an unswerving progressive vision and a
dazzling, empathic ferocity. As an activist for women's and LGBT issues she brought the oppression of women
and lesbians to the forefront of poetic discourse and kept it there for nearly a half-century. Rich won the
prestigious Yale Younger Poets prize for her first published book of poetry, A Change of World (1951), a
collection that featured, "Aunt Jennifer's Tigers." Her poems have been published in many collections, including
Collected Early Poems: 1950-1970 (1993), The Will to Change (1971), The Fact of a Door-frame (1984), and
An Atlas of the Difficult World (1991). She has also written What Is Found There (1993) and other books of
prose. Rich retained a dexterous command of the plain, pithy utterance. In a 1984 speech she summed up her
reason for writing and, by loud unspoken implication, her reason for being in just seven words. What she
and her sisters-in-arms were fighting to achieve, she said, was simply this: the creation of a society without
domination. [1]
This poem was written in 1951, a time in which there were much fewer options for women in terms of
careers and family planning. Women were not financially independent. We get a glimpse into the lives of the
Aunt Jennifer's of the world, and a glance into the ways that gender affects us. Even today the problem lay
buried, silent, in the minds of women over the globe. In the middle of the twentieth century women suffered a
strange stirring and a sense of dissatisfaction. Each suburban wife struggled with it alone. Time and again
women heard in voices of tradition and of Freudian superiority that they could desire--no greater destiny than to
glory in their own femininity. Some women, remembered painfully giving up their dreams and passions, but
most of the younger women no longer even thought about them. The society celebrated their maturity,
femininity and their adjusting mentality. Women were expected to devote their lives from earliest girlhood to
finding a husband and bearing children. But women's imagination is boundless, like music, painting, and
writing: their stream of apparition is incredible. Rich, in her poems, has explored the mechanisms of the male-
gaze and tried to re-construct the identity of the women as it was before being distorted by the phallocentric
ideology. The poet has directed her gaze upon the gazing process of the mainstream. She examines womens
allotted positions in American society, and pry open a space in the critical models available for reconstructing
identity and, rewriting the canon that result in en-visioning a new world to come [2].

II. Analysis
The poem Aunt Jennifers Tiger explores the controlled condition of women with all its possibilities
of challenging the patriarchal gaze upon the women. Aunt Jennifer is the archetype whose creative energies
are blemished by mans desire to see the women in conventional roles like knitting.For too long, she feels ,
women have been estrange from their creative female selfhood. She refers to herself as a member of a new
generation of women writers creating new work from the psychic energy being generated by womens

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Aunt Jennifer: A victim of patriarchal society and a persona evolving consciousness of modern

movement toward what was being called the new Space on the boundaries of patriarchy[3]. The poem
reflects a core theme that is seen in Rich's work throughout her writing life: her unwavering support for women's
rights. When she received the award in 1974, Rich dedicated it to women everywherewomen who had been
silenced, who hadn't been given the opportunity to speak in their male-dominated society. Andrea O Reily
states, I had not realized how fully and deeply Rich had touched the lives of so many women [4]. Poetry is not
a healing lotion, an emotional massage, a kind of linguistic aromatherapy, she said. A seasoned campaigner
Rich believed that verse alone could change deep-rooted social institutions. She was among the most influential
writers of the feminist movement and one of the best-known activists among public intellectuals of America.
"Aunt Jennifer's Tigers" on the peripheral level is only twelve lines long. But at a deeper side this poem
packs a serious punch, a kind of protest and gesture of solidarity. In just three short stanzas it presents us with
the life of a disempowered woman and offers a vision of her future immortality through art. "Aunt Jennifer's
Tigers, though addresses the issues of woman is not written only for an audience of women. This poem is a
symbolic representation of a woman whom we admire, but who has perhaps been held back in life because of
her gender.
"Patriarchy" is an important term while analyzing Rich's work. Patriarchy refers to a male-dominated
society in which men hold authority and power and women are subordinated to them. Rich, however, uses an
inventive image to recast these conventional themes in a new way. Aunt Jennifer is a wife who is totally
controlled by her husband. Her fingers flutter while in wool work. She is scared of her husband which shows
inequality and injustice in her marriage. Marriage brings two people in an equal position where both expect
justice, love and equality in behavior. But here in this poem Jennifer has become the victim of injustice. As long
as power can be envisioned only in terms that are culturally determined as masculine; the revolutionary content
of the vision, which was all limited to a highly intervened and symbolic plane, will remain insufficient. The fact
is that assertion against the patriarchy is here imagined only in terms set by the patriarchs may be seen as this
poem's version of the tigers' "fearful symmetry." And the "Immortal hand or eye" that framed their symmetry is
not Aunt Jennifer's framing her needlework. It is patriarchy and male - chauvinism framing Aunt Jennifer.
As a feminist poet Rich insists on the importance of the imaginative identification with all women
(and with the ghostly woman in all men) and commits herself to the re-creation of a female community. In
Keyes's rendering, Rich's feminism, while on the one hand the source of her strength, has made her into an
"ideologue" who "may well sacrifice the truths of her heart andof poetry for what she perceives as higher
purposes". For Keyes, the "female chauvinism" of this "man-hater" brands "all men as the enemy," "guilty of
crimes against women and against life on this planet" [5]. Rich hopes that the community of all women the
poet, the housewife, the lesbian, the mathematician, the mothers, the waitress. will create a culture in which
women have equal economic, social, and political rights with men. She also strove to convey a sense of
immediacy, even urgency. Instead of poems about experiences I am getting poem that are experiences, Rich
wrote in 1964.

Aunt Jennifer's tigers prance across a screen,


Bright topaz denizens of a world of green.
They do not fear the men beneath the tree:
They pace in sleek chivalric certainty.

The first verse of the poem describes the fearless tigers Aunt Jennifer creates in needlepoint. The
speaker describes the tigers which her aunt produced by using colored threads on heavy cloth. They are set in
motion, moving quickly by raising the front legs and jumping forwards on the back legs. In the green jungle
they look bright yellow and as valuable as topazes which reveals her dream of a happier life in her needle work.
Aunt Jennifer lives a quiet and subdued life but the tigers she imagined are just opposite to her. They are proud,
active, fearless, determined and chivalric "prancing" across the tapestry. Their freedom and dignity is contrasted
in the second verse to the restrictions of marriage, symbolized by the wedding band that weighs down Aunt
Jennifers fingers as she sews. The poet tells us about Aunt Jennifer's needlework tapestry, which features
beautiful bright tigers prancing fierce less. Though they aren't real, these tigers seem pretty alive to us. The
tigers are strong and have no fears, so they've got that going for them. Why does the speaker ascribe a human
attribute like "prancing" to a non-human thing like an animal, or a representation of an animal, Aunt Jennifer,
though, is not so free. It is found that these tigers aren't in iron cages, just scattered throughout the house. They
are not afraid of the men, even though they are right underneath the tigers. The tigers are so brave that they
"pace in sleek chivalric certainty." Their "chivalric certainty" is a representation by Aunt Jennifer of her own
envisioned power. It reasserts the rift between her actual social existences. Yes, passages in Rich, especially
certain poems of the mid-to-late seventies, have, quite intentionally, shaken and shocked readers, women as well
as men, and, not surprisingly, anger and outrage expressed with such concentrated and convincing vehemence
alienated many. "The Phenomenology of Anger" is an extreme anddisturbing statement (for the poet, too, no

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Aunt Jennifer: A victim of patriarchal society and a persona evolving consciousness of modern

less), but Rich's attempt to become the lightning rod for feelings long suppressed in herselfand in other women
has to be read as a lyric poem in a body ofwork that extends and qualifies and complements it. There is
noquestion that during those initial combative years of feminist definitionRich decided to write primarily to and
about women and thatmale figures entered the poems almost exclusively as the patriarchand enemy [6].
"Chivalric" connotes all those things that a true knight represents: loyalty, courtesy, and bravery. The
main images are of Aunt Jennifer as a fearful wife and, secondly, the magnificent tigers she creates in her panel.
Images of precious substances run through the poem: topaz, ivory, and gold of wedding band. The yellow
precious stone topaz metaphorically stands for the stripes of tiger. In the poem, meek Jennifer and her
confident tiger are contrasted with each other. Fear is the prime atmosphere in Jennifers painful life where her
fingers tremble while doing needle work in her husbands absence. The speaker personifies the tigers, imagining
that they have human feelings, like fear. But these men beneath the tree on the tapestry- are real men, careless
and dominant. The tigers are awesome bright topaz denizens of the forest who pace with honor and braveness.

Aunt Jennifer's fingers fluttering through her wool


Find even the ivory needle hard to pull.
The massive weight of Uncle's wedding band
Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer's hand.

Aunt Jennifer's hands move swiftly and daintily while she works on her wool maybe even
nervously?through the air. This contrasts with the tigers, who pace "in chivalric certainty." The movement of
the tigers is definitive, while Aunt Jennifer's movements are less so. She is struggling hard to pull the needle
through the wool that makes the tapestry. At work sewing something, she's not very certain of her work and it
seems to be giving her difficulty. Aunt Jennifer's needlework seems like a labor. A distinct contrast, between
Aunt Jennifer's tigers, who are brave and stately, and Aunt Jennifer herself, who struggles with her craft is seen.
Let's think of Aunt Jennifer's needlework itself. Needlepoint, sewing, crochetingthese are all
historically feminine types of craft work, often considered as "lower" art forms than painting and sculpture. It's
interesting, then, that Aunt Jennifer is stalled even in her needleworkan area of life she could express her
feminine self. The only thing Aunt Jennifer seems to have in this poem is her needlework, and she even
struggles with that because of the weight of her marriage. One of the interesting questions about the poem is
whether Aunt Jennifer's struggles are due to her relationship with her husband, or because of the lack of power
for women in the patriarchal society in which she lives. In other words, is her problem her husband's fault, or is
it the problem of an entire culture that subordinates women to men?
The air of freedom and confidence dominates the atmosphere in her artistic creation. The paradoxical
situation is created in the poem when trembling and mastered woman creates free and confident creatures in
her work of art. The tone appears to be positive and cheerful when the poet describes the tiger but it becomes
sad and dull at times of describing Aunt Jennifer.
The metaphorical weight of Aunt Jennifers wedding band in lines 7-8 raises a question. Why Aunt
Jennifer struggles with the needle? She is being weighed down by her wedding band from her husband, called
"Uncle" by the poem and implies that her marriage was unhappy and held her back from the life that she wanted
to live. The wedding band is acting as a symbol for Aunt and Uncle's marriage itself. Even though Aunt Jennifer
herself wears it, the wedding band is "Uncle's wedding band. Aunt Jennifer is defined by her husband, and the
symbolic "massive weight" of the wedding band is holding her back from her needlework. She is sadly weighed
down by a wedding band while the tigers are prancing and pacing bravely.

When Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie


Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by.
The tigers in the panel that she made
Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid.

When Aunt Jennifer is dead her hands will still be terrified. She will be ringed with ordeals she was
mastered by in death, as in life. Ringed appears as a symbol of the marriage that trapped her. The master is
"the ordeals" that she suffers, presumably at the hand of her husband. Though the lines are ambiguous here, it
still suggests that Uncle is the master and Aunt Jennifer is the slave. She finds no escape from her troubles even
after her death. But, the speaker says, the tigers will keep prancing in her needlework, and Aunt Jennifer will be
immortalized through her art. Though Aunt Jennifer may die one day with "terrified hands," but her tigers will
be just the opposite of those hands. They'll keep up their pride and go on prancing.
Ironic awareness of Aunt Jennifers position as a married woman shows her as ringed with ordeals she
was mastered by, image Rich sets against the proud and unafraid tigers, potently and aggressively themselves as
a symbolic expression of the confident and capable female artist certain of her powers. Yet powerful they are,

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Aunt Jennifer: A victim of patriarchal society and a persona evolving consciousness of modern

they are fixed and framed within the screen, as within the art form static as an emblem, boundaried in space,
suspended in time and utterly unfree to act in the world just as the feminine woman, ornamental and
decorative object of male domination is caged, her energy restricted, with a patriarchal culture [7].
Did Aunt Jennifer imagine herself as a tiger? It can be presumed that the tigers are symbols of her inner
life that she couldn't express. Those tigers are representations of all the qualities that she herself wanted to have,
but couldn't, because of her husband. The tigers display in art the values that Aunt Jennifer must repress or
displace in life: strength, assertion, fearlessness, fluidity of motion [8]. The poem also explores the eternity of
art. Even if she was unsatisfied by her marriage, Aunt Jennifer found a life for herself in her art and she will live
forever through her tigers, "prancing, proud and unafraid". The final verse of the poem persists in this
destabilization as here rebellion and repression meet in the simultaneity of the fearless tigers and the lifeless
aunt.
Meg BoeremaGillete's reading, however, is that the poem resists those oppositions upon which Pope's
and Byars' criticisms depend. I would argue that "Aunt Jennifer's Tigers" does not stage a contest between the
individual and the social, but rather characterizes them by their interdependence. In the central symbols of the
poem--the tapestry tigers and the Uncle's wedding band--the individual and social, the personal and the political
meet. Byars argues the tapestry tigers are not just individual artistic expressions; they are politically inflected,
engaged in patriarchal chivalry myths. Gillete calls tigers as icons of colonialism - suggestive of capitalist
regimes as in line 6 Find even the ivory needle hard to pull ivory needle [9]. The personal and the political
again meet in the intimacy of "Uncle's wedding band" (line 7).
Deborah Pope's and Thomas B. Byars describes the poem as a contest between the individual and the
social, between "imagination" and "gender roles and expectation", [10] between the "oppressed" and the
"oppressor" Aunt Jennifer's Tigers is a poem highly provocative encouraging political action. Like Plath, Rich
writes about womens roles and experiences but she moved beyond Plath in discovering ways to apply her anger
not to self-destruction but to pointed critiques and re-envisioning of society. Aunt Jennifer provides a chronicle
of the evolving consciousness of the modern women. Aunt Jennifers image explores the experience of women,
who reject patriarchal definitions of femininity by separating themselves from the political and social reality that
trivializes and subordinate females. As in other works of Rich, her Aunt Jennifer stands as a representative for
all who are silenced and crippled by the world masculinity unfit for women or men.

III. Conclusion
"Aunt Jennifer's life implies the presence of patriarchal politics. She feels the burden of duty and
obedience. This is shown by the symbol of the wedding ring that she wears. It is described as her husbands
property: Uncles wedding band. Her life with her husband described as a life of ordeals present a negative
picture of marriage. The tigers in the poem represent Jennifers innermost desire. She wants to be strong like the
tigers that do not fear the men. She wants to create precious pieces of art. Her life has been uncertain, helpless.
She finds courage, justice and honor in the smooth movement of the tigers. Thus the tiger stand for her
unfulfilled wishes. Perhaps Aunt Jennifer uses art as an escape from her troubles. In her artwork Jennifer
imagines the kind of life she would have liked.
Adrienne Rich's poems are known for her observation of the experiences of women in society. This
poem is remarkable in her mission of reconstructing identity."Aunt Jennifer's Tigers" is a statement of conflict
in women, specifically between the impulse to freedom and imagination and the "massive weight" of gender
roles and expectations, signified by "Uncle's wedding band. Rich echoes many ideas of the radical feminist
movement, counterposing the struggle for womens liberation to workers struggles for economic justice,
despite the fact that, as she later acknowledges, the vast majority of women are workers [11]. Rich strongly
argues that womens disenfranchisement at the hands of men must end. Rich deals with that power of the
women which is to engender, to create, to bring forth fuller life, unlike the exploitative power of the males.

Acknowledgements
The author acknowledges Vignan Pharmacy College for inspiring this work.

References
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[3]. Cheri, ColbiLangdell. Adrienne Rich: The Moment of Change, Pacific Coast Philology, Vol. 41 (2006), 146-148.
[4]. OReilly, Andrea. From Motherhood and Mothering: The Legacy of Adrienne Richs Of Woman Born. New York: State
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