20 Dec 2015

Wrote this a few years ago. Forgot about it. Posting it now.

So I want to explain why Una Hawthorne is important to me.  I came across her after I read The Scarlet Letter.  She was Nathaniel Hawthorne’s daughter, and she was isolated in her youth for behaving more masculine than feminine. She was also pressured from a young age to find a husband, but apparently had no desire to marry.  Eventually she was diagnosed with hysteria, spent years in deep depression, and died at age 33.

Stories about hysteria interest me because of their tension.  It reminds me of the uncomfortable line between crying and laughing.  A book project I made a few years ago called, “I never liked you anyway” was made in the spirit of that line. I collected stories from friends about that precise moment.  And when I try to imagine a hysterical woman, the only thing I can come up with is a woman who doesn’t know whether she should cry or laugh. Which is what led me to feeling so certain that Una Hawthorne was not hysterical.  She was restrained from expressing herself entirely, and she went a little bonkers, is all.  After reading all the vague details of her childhood, I could imagine her so clearly.

I can only speak for myself here, but some of the smartest women I have had the privilege of knowing are totally nuts.  Not because they’re being restrained by men, but because every day there is a choice made to prioritize parts of themselves, and choosing which of those parts the world should see.  A woman can be made up of a million different traits, but if she’s not prioritizing her appearance, then she’s risking something.

What I’m trying to say is that these things bring women to confusion because it’s like a loss of identity.  After I read about Una, I saw that she must have been present in my work for a long time.