Some time ago, out of interest, I pulled a list of ‘Children’s Classics’ off
Wikipedia. There were 66 titles, and Aesop’s Fables headed the list with
William Caxton’s edition of 1484. Apart from a couple of obscure titles - at least, I have never heard of ‘A Token for
Children’ by James Janeway, and ‘A Pretty Little Pocket Book’ by John
Newbery - I can hand on heart say that I encountered most of them during
my own childhood. 'Robinson Crusoe’, ‘Ivanhoe’, ‘The Swiss
Family Robinson’, ‘The Coral Island’, ‘Journey to The Centre of
the Earth’, ‘Uncle Remus’,‘Black Beauty’, ‘Treasure Island’, ‘The Happy Prince’. Tick, tick, tick. And so on.
What strikes me now is the extreme scarcity of heroines in these books. Fairytales apart, there are only 12
stories out of the entire 66 in which the main character is female:
they are ‘Little Goody Twoshoes’ (1765), ‘Alice’s Adventures in
Wonderland’ (1865) and ‘Through the Looking Glass’ (1871), ‘Little
Women’ (1868), ‘What Katy Did’ (1873), ‘Heidi’ (1884), ‘The Wonderful
Wizard of Oz’ (1900), ‘Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm’ (1903), ‘Pollyanna’
(1913), ‘A Little Princess’ (1905), ‘Anne of Green Gables’ (1908), and
perhaps Mary Lennox of ‘The Secret Garden’. There are some deceptive titles which sound as
though they are going to be about heroines, such as ‘Lorna Doone’
(1869) and ‘The Princess and the Goblin’ (1871) but these are really more about the male protagonists, John Ridd and Curdie.
Even
though the last book on the list was published in 1918, many – in fact
most – of these titles formed part of my reading a full half century
later. As a child growing up in the sixties, I can’t say I consciously
noticed the absence of strong female characters, since naturally I
identified with the hero, whoever he might be. I swam lagoons with
Jack, Ralph and Peterkin, roistered and swashbuckled with D’Artagnan,
escaped across the heather with Alan Breck, roamed the jungle with
Mowgli – but I did notice the rare occasions when the main character was a strong heroine. This, I think, is why so many of us loved – loved
– Katy Carr, Jo March and Anne of Green Gables. We were resigned to encountering girly girls in books. And by girly girls, I mean girls filtered though a conservatice male imagination. Girls who needed to be rescued, who
swooned on manly breasts, like Lorna Doone. Girls who were sweetly domestic,
decorative, helpless and good like David Copperfield’s Dora. Girls who were ill-treated victims like Sara Crewe. Or else girls who simply were not there at all. It was a
literary world in which boys were allowed to be Peter Pan but girls were
condemned to be Wendy.
So we were thrilled when Katy lost her
temper, disobeyed her aunt and swung in that swing; all the
Victorian stuff about becoming an invalid and the heart of the
family hardly seemed to count in comparison. Some of Susan Coolidge's
writing is still extremely funny. You can sense her delight in
her heroine's realistically child-like outbursts. Here's Katy inventing
a break-time game:
…Katy’s unlucky star
put it into her head to invent a new game, which she called the Game of
Rivers. It was played in the following manner: - each girl took the
name of a river and laid out for herself an appointed path through the
room, winding among the desks and benches, and making a low roaring
sound, to imitate the noise of water. Cecy was the Plate; Marianne
Brooks, a tall girl, the Mississippi; Alice Blair, the Ohio;
Clover, the Penobscot, and so on. They were instructed to run into
each other once in a while because, as Katy said, ‘rivers do’. As for
Katy herself, she was ‘Father Ocean’,
and, growling horribly, raged up and down the platform where Mrs Knight
usually sat. Every now and then… she would suddenly cry out, ‘Now for a
meeting of the waters!’ whereupon all the rivers bouncing, bounding,
scrambling, screaming, would turn and run towards Father Ocean, while he
roared louder than all of them put together, and made short rushes up
and down, to represent the movement of waves on a beach.
Naturally they get into trouble, but anyone can see it's worth it
to have had so much fun. And Jo March, too, could lose her temper, and acted –
in boots! – and wrote stories, and did things. While as for Anne – impulsive, rebellious,
outspoken Anne –
“How dare you call me
skinny and ugly? How dare you say I’m freckled and red-headed? How
would you like to have such things said about you? How would you like
to be told that you are fat and clumsy and probably hadn’t a spark of
imagination in you? I don’t care if I do hurt your feelings by saying
so! I hope I hurt them. You have hurt mine worse than they were ever
hurt before even by Mrs Thomas’s intoxicated husband. And I’ll never forgive you for it, never, never!”
Such girls seemed to be
going places. The trouble was that there wasn’t really anyplace for
them to go. I don’t know why the imaginations of the women who created
them could come up with so few goals in an era that was producing strong
women by the bucketload: in the States, the early suffragists like
Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton; in Britain reformers like
Florence Nightingale, Josephine Butler, the Pankhursts. Writing and teaching figured largely. Anne of Green Gables becomes Anne of
Ingleside, a teacher, marries Gilbert Blythe and has children. Jo
marries Professor Bhaer not Laurie (this we could hardly forgive, though
it may be more realistic!); she does become a writer, but then goes all
matriarchal and nurturing and 'womanly'. Katy travels to Europe and marries a young naval officer who is attracted to her because of her – wait for it – selfless nursing skills. No one becomes a doctor or a politician or a reformer.
So the vigorous rushing
rivers of Katy’s game end up flowing decorously into the great calm
land-locked sea of wife-and-motherhood. Still, at least these books
gave expression, release, validation to the passion and
energy of growing girls. Nowadays we take it for granted. My own
daughters were never very interested in Little Women or Anne of Green
Gables. They didn’t find Jo an exciting rebel but a prissy homebody
taking covered baskets of Christmas dinner to the poor, selflessly
selling her hair. (Her hair? What? Why?)
In
Enid Blyton’s ‘Famous Five’, how I and my schoolfriends identified with
the tomboy George, who cut her curly hair, wore shorts, owned a dog,
told the truth at all costs and was brave and passionate. How much
better she was than sissy Anne (who wore a plaid skirt and a
hairslide)! And yet, and yet – that cry of hers, “I’m as good as a boy
any day” – is the very mark of inequality. Why should a girl have to
masquerade as a boy to be taken seriously? Why should bravery,
independence and action be seen as masculine qualities?
We shouldn’t be
complacent. I can think of plenty of independent, strong heroines in
modern children’s fiction – Joan Aiken’s Dido Twite would come top of my
personal list, and Harriet of ‘Harriet the Spy’, Lyra in ‘The Golden Compass', and Garth Nix's gallant Sabriel and Lirael. These girls aren’t trying
to prove that they are as good as or better than boys. They simply get
on with life and grapple with its problems. But there are many books for teenagers in which the heroines need – rely on – yearn
for – the strong arms and love of some idealised boy. Compare Bella of 'Twilight' to Katy Carr or Jo March. It's hard
to imagine either of them languishing after 'perfect' Edward.
Of all the girls in all
the titles on this list of classic books for children, the most
independent of all is Lewis Carroll’s Alice, who calmly steers her
way through the looking glass wonderlands of her own imagination. Alice
never feels in the least inferior to any male character. She stands
up for herself in her own very feminine way, experimenting, chopping
logic, lecturing herself and others, refusing to be snubbed, insulted or
put in her place. At the end of each book when her imaginary world threatens
her, she pulls it down about her ears like Samson pulling down the
pillars of the temple in Gaza. She is extraordinary – and the creation of a man. But she is pre-adolescent: what does the world really hold for ‘alices when they are jung and easily freudened’? Carroll’s Alice
touches a kind of bedrock: a certainty of self-worth that may be felt
by many little girls in stable and happy families – but which is still
all too easily lost as the teens commence.