"Orwell's biographers are seven men looking at a man."
This is the sentence that stuck with me the most during my read of Wifedom: Mrs Orwell's Invisible Life. Anna Funder calls out the blind spot in the existing biographies of Orwell: his wife, Eileen O'Shaughnessy. It's patriarchy working overtime when you realise how she was and is overlooked, not just by her husband during their lifetime, but also by her husband's biographers and readers posthumously. It's chilling how she's literally not to be found anywhere. Anna Funder removes her from the margin and tries to put her at the center of her biography, with differing success (imo).
This biography is far from perfect and still centers Orwell to an extent but I can't really fault Funder for that. What I took more of an issue with are some of the bad faith interpretations of Orwell's actions. Funder decided to fictionalise parts of this biography – which is a choice many readers will have a problem with, which I understand – and so there are tidbits of imagined dialogue between Eileen and George that make George particularly look bad — but then you have to remind yourself that Orwell never really said those things. You get what I'm saying? Like, I kinda understand why Funder choose this path: she wanted to humanise Eileen and make her readers understand that this was a real woman, a real woman who really suffered at the hands of her husband, and this whole book reads more like it is in the tradition of 'writing back' anyways (see Maryse Condé's I, Tituba... which also gives life to a real historic figure, though in an entirely fictionalised context), but academically speaking, this isn't clean work. It's a tad bit messy, ngl.
All in all, I still appreciate this book and it opened my eyes to some of Orwell's shortcomings that are essential if you truly want to understand his work. Funder does an excellent job at showing how much Eileen was involved in her husband's career. Her function as 'wife' was what enabled him to write so much in the first place. She did all the care work, on top of being his typist, on top of offering suggestions and advice, on top of being the sole breadwinner in their marriage for some time etc. etc. Her impact truly cannot be overstated, yet Funder is among the first scholars to give Eileen her flowers. It's crazy.
I wanna share some of my favorite quotes/ most notable sections from this work bc I know not everyone's gonna read it but you might still wanna learn more about Eileen and her husband:
● "...during the first few weeks of marriage we quarrelled so continuously & really bitterly that I thought I'd save time & just write one letter to everyone when the murder or separation had been accomplished." – Eileen in a letter to her best friend, shortly after her wedding to Eric (George)
● "I write because there is some lie that I want to expose, some fact to which I want to draw attention..." – George on why he writes (Oscar's art-for-art's-sake-ass would be gagged!!)
● "There were two great facts about woman which...you could only learn by getting married...One was their incorrigible dirtiness & untidiness. The other was their terrible, devouring sexuality...women were quite insatiable, & never seemed fatigued by no matter how much love-making..." – George in a private notebook, during his final illness, after the marriage was already over
● Orwell's own family was part Burmese. Both his uncle and great-uncle on his mother's side had partnered with Burmese women.
● Funder writes: "So many of these men benefited from a social arrangement defying both the moral and the physical laws of the universe in wich the unpaid, invisible work of a woman created the time and – neat, warmed and cushion-plumbed – space for their work." Uff. True though!
● Orwell tried to rape Jacintha, his "childhood sweetheart". She wrote to him afterwards, telling him of "her disgust and shock that he should try and force her to let him make love to her...He had held her down [and he was 6'4" while she was still under 5'] and though she struggled, yelling at him to stop, he had torn her skirt and badly bruised a shoulder and her left hip."
● Eileen's friend Lydia thought she deserved someone better than Eric Blair
● after the marriage, there is a vastly more physical labor for Eileen than she has ever done before – in the house and garden and shop
● there is an enormous change that took place in Orwell's work after his marriage to Eileen,
● Orwell left Eileen's involvement in Spain out of Homage to Catalonia, even though she was doing more important work there than him; he also doesn't mention her visit to the front or how she otherwise supported him during that time
● Funder writes: "Orwell spends over 2500 words telling us of his hospital treatment without mentioning that Eileen was there. I wonder what she felt, later, as she typed them." Uff.
● Funder: "Eileen had worked at the political headquarters, visited him at the front, cared for him when wounded, saved Orwell's manuscript by giving it to McNair, saved the passports, saved Orwell from almost certain arrest at the hotel, and somehow got the visas to save them all."
● Orwell kept hitting on Eileen's close friends (big yikes if you ask me) – there's one letter in particular he wrote to Lydia: "I have thought of you so often – have you thought about me, I wonder? I know it's indiscreet to write such things in letters, but you'll be clever and burn this, will you?" OH FUCK YOU!
● Orwell most likely slept with Burmese prostitutes, which is abhorrent (especially in the context of him being part of the colonizers)
● Eileen gets a job in a highly placed position in the newly formed Censorship Department of the Ministry of Information. She is the one who financially supports their family for the next two years. No other Orwell biographer makes that clear.
● Orwell in a letter to Brenda: "I've tried so often to forget you but somehow didn't succeed...Eileen said she wished I could sleep with you abt twice a year, just to keep me happy, but of course we can't arrange things like that." BOY, DO YOU HEAR YOURSELF??? ARE YOU OKAY???
● Brenda herself later said: "He didn't really like women. He was a sadist and that was why he had feelings towards women." YIKERRRRRS.
● Eileen to her friend: "I have many times half thought I could come to Bristol but it is literally years since a weekend belonged to me & George would have a haemorrhage." I HATE IT HERE. He's your husband, not your prison guard.
● Lydia remembers: "After a row with Eileen, to my great annoyance, George came to my room and got into bed with me...I had to spend the next half hour wrestling to ward him off from forcing himself on me." I HATE IT HERE!!! There are many other instances which Funder references in which Orwell sexually assaults women. It seems to have been a pattern with him.
● after her death (Eileen dies from complications after an operation), Orwell desperately wants to replace her (bc she fulfilled so many functions in his life as 'wife') that he basically interviews a bunch of women to make them this proposal
● "Life is bad but death is worse." – Orwell in his last notebook