Debating Women: Reading Augustan Verse
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Abstract
Some of the works of Swift and Pope use satiric bite towards gender and
sexuality. Moreover, their misogynistic attitude towards female and feminine
virtues, and characters had sparked controversy. Women poets of their time
mocked at their misogynistic attitude.
Misogynistic impact on Pope and Swift has been much discussed in terms
of their physical appearance and the reality that they were life-long bachelors.
Swift hates human pride, or the illusion that we can rise above the sinfulness and
frailty that are our nature impure, fallen creatures and he never misses a chance to
shatter that illusion. Hence women, associated romantically with beauty and love,
must be dragged down to earth and have their cosmetics rubbed off. His focus on
bodily function in “The Lady’s Dressing Room”has often been ascribed to a
fixation or frustrated desire, as in Lady Mary Wortley Montagu’s counterattack.
Pope, like Swift, attracts attack on his misogynistic attitude from some female
poets of his time. Despite his patronizing attitude towards female wit as in the
exchange with Lady Winchilsea, he certainly takes a strong interest in female and
domestic arrangement. Anne Irwin and Mary Leapor dismisses Pope’s
characterization of women.
