Opening Up Space: A Lovely Technofeminist Opportunity

"Female Friendships"

In her chapter on “Female Friendships,” Craik guides women to cultivate friendships based on choice to create stable and honest force that assists them in becoming more grounded individuals. She pays special attention to  in their emotional, financial, moral, and physical well-being.

“A bond, not of nature but of choice, it should exist and be maintained calm, free, and clear, having neither rights nor jealousies; at once the firmest and most independent of all human ties” (132)

Craik’s version of female community examines how shared work and shared faith can be useful to cultivate support and self-dependence, not only for individual single women but for the collective community of women, including the reader.  Craik develops a narrative voice that encourages immediate personal self-development among women but also embraces the communitarian dimension of female Protestant sisterhood.  Her paradox between the individualistic and communitarian dimensions rests on to middle-class Protestant beliefs about the saving power of work.  As Sally Mitchell writes, Craik “promotes sisterhood through empathy” (313).

Craik compares women’s friendships to love; both nurture unity with another person.  However, only friendship fosters a sense of self-identity independent from the other person.  Similar to one’s first love, first friendships are “one of the purest, most self-forgetful and self- denying attachments that the human heart can experience” (130).  Both are “sweet” whether “given or returned,” should “last forever,” and value the “sanctity of silence” (133, 142, 144).


The distinction between them lies in the way friendships encourage liberation.  Indeed, according to Craik, they “must have an independent self-existence, capable of gradations and varieties” (139).  By Craik depicted the inticate emotional experiences of single women in the mid-nineteenth century.


In Victorian England, single (especially middle class) women were alienated by the rest of society.  As a fellow single, Anglican, financially independent woman, Craik offers a solution the female struggle by relating to it, and acknowledging, as Elaine Showalter writes, “while women could not depend on men to give them homes to support them, they could rely on each other” (Showalter 14).  Anna Stenson Newnum describes Craik’s intentions for writing about sisterhoods as providing “single women with opportunities for work and an outlet for their affections, which for her are the most important merits of any female community” (Newnum 309). By inserting herself into the conversation and in relation to the reader, she balances the specific individual dimension with her call for a collective transformation in women’s attitudes.

How does Craik’s upbringing and religious identity influence her writing and reception?


While her father served as preacher in a small nonconformist Primitive Methodist congregation, Craik identified herself as Anglican and highlighted the need for inclusivity within the Church. Stenson describes her attempt to create a “version of female community that would be acceptable outside of High Church circles by appealing to the middle-class, Protestant belief in the saving power of work” (309). 


 

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