Sandra Ellen Mortola was born in New York City on December 27, 1936, and grew up in Jackson Heights, Queens.[4] In 1957, she married Elliot Gilbert.[4]
According to reports in The New York Times, Gilbert, along with Emory Elliott, Valerie Smith, and Margaret Doody all resigned from Princeton in 1989.[6] The reports suggest that the four were unhappy with the leniency shown to Thomas McFarland after he was accused of sexual misconduct. McFarland was initially put on a one-year suspension, but eventually took early retirement after these resignations and threats of student boycotts.[7]
She was named the inaugural M. H. Abrams Distinguished Visiting Professor at Cornell University for spring 2007,[8] and the Lurie Distinguished Visiting Professor in the Creative Writing MFA program at San Jose State University in 2009.[9]
Collaboration with Susan Gubar
Gilbert and Gubar met in the early 1970s at Indiana University. In 1974, they collaborated to co-teach a course on literature in English by women; their lectures led to the manuscript for Madwoman in the Attic. They continued to co-author and co-edit, and were jointly awarded several academic distinctions. Notably, they were jointly named Ms. magazine's "Woman of the Year" in 1986 for their work as head editors of The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women: The Traditions in English.[4]
Gilbert's critical and theoretical works, particularly those co-authored with Gubar, are generally identified as texts within the realm of second-wave feminism.[10]
"The Anxiety of Authorship"
In The Madwoman in the Attic, Gilbert and Gubar take the Oedipal model of the anxiety of influence developed by literary critic Harold Bloom, centred around writers' Oedipal fear and jealousy for their perceived literary "fore-fathers", and adapt it to their own purposes as feminist critics.[11] According to Bloom's theory, the developing writer must struggle to break free from his most immediate, direct influences, to form his own voice, and to break away from identification to find his own imaginative space.[12] Gilbert and Gubar extend this male-oriented model to incorporate a female "Anxiety of Authorship",[13] whereby lack of predecessors makes the very act of writing problematic.
Where Bloom wonders how the male author can find a voice that is his own, Gilbert and Gubar – building on Virginia Woolf's analysis of the "difficulty...that they had no tradition behind them"[14] – emphasise the problem a woman writer may have in seeing herself as possessing a literary voice at all, given the absence of a maternal precursor.[15] Where Bloom finds aggression and competition between male literary figures in terms of self-consciously feeling influenced and desiring to be influential, the "anxiety of authorship" identifies a "secret sisterhood" of role models within the Western tradition who show that women can write,[13] the recuperation of the tradition of which becomes a feminist project.[16] However, these models too may be "infected" with a lack of confidence, and with internal contradiction of ambition, hampered by the culturally induced assumption of "the patriarchal authority of art."[17]
In later works, the pair explore "the 'double bind' of the woman poet...the contradictions between her vocation and her gender" (Shakespeare's Sisters), as well as the development (in the wake of Sylvia Plath) of a new genre of 'mother poets'.[18]
Personal life and death
Gilbert lived in Berkeley, California, and lived, until 2008, in Paris, France. Her husband, Elliot L. Gilbert, with whom she had three children, was chair of the Department of English at University of California, Davis, until his death from surgical complications in 1991.[4] His death was the subject of her 1995 book Wrongful Death: A Medical Tragedy; she sued for medical malpractice, and received a settlement.[4]
^"Lurie Visiting Authors". Department of English and Comparative Literature. San Jose State University.
^Allen, Holly Eva. 2022. Review of Still Mad: American Women Writers and the Feminist Imagination, by Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2021. Women’s Studies 51(7). 846–850. https://doi.org/10.1080/00497878.2022.2112043. Retrieved Dec. 7, 2024.
^J. Childers ed., The Columbia Dictionary of Modern Literary and Cultural Criticism (1995) pp. 13-14