This connects up with my recent post
Active and Passive Protagonists in relation to the Masculine and the Feminine
Can't believe it took me so long to figure that out. That the feminine is receptive I mean, as the title says. I think I wasn't able to until I thought in terms of of the feminine in me, rather than women. Passivity can be dysfunctional feminine energy, just as aggression is dysfunctional masculine energy. Maybe more properly passivity is just a freezing up, not specifically related to either.
I also see openness as a property of the feminine. As in openness to new ideas or to the viewpoints of others. Ok, that's just another term for receptivity, isn't it? Oops!
It's the tendency of the masculine to focus and project, while the tendency of the feminine is to unite or to diffuse. So masculine energy can be seen as a searchlight, and feminine as a floodlight that illuminates a much broader area less intensely. This fits with the fact that male brains have more gray matter, which specializes in task-oriented behavior, while the female brain has more white matter, useful for holistic thinking.
"In general, men have approximately 6.5 times the amount of gray matter related to general intelligence than women, and women have nearly 10 times the amount of white matter related to intelligence than men. Gray matter represents information processing centers in the brain, and white matter represents the networking of – or connections between – these processing centers."Now—back to thinking in terms of the masculine and the feminine as tendencies available to all of us, rather than as men and women—another analogy would be the sun as symbol of masculine energy and the moon, stars and constellations as feminine.
This, according to Rex Jung, a UNM neuropsychologist and co-author of the study, may help to explain why men tend to excel in tasks requiring more local processing (like mathematics), while women tend to excel at integrating and assimilating information from distributed gray-matter regions in the brain, such as required for language facility."
Source
These are also perfect metaphors for the conscious and unconscious minds. The conscious mind does exhibit a lot of what we consider masculine tendencies, and the unconscious feminine ones. In fact it would seem gray matter might be associated mostly with conscious activity and white matter with unconscious activity.
Well of course! Doesn't it always come down to that? How many entries have I made in the blog where I realize that the ancient Asians had it all figured out already with the Yin and Yang concepts, which have been reiterated in many other forms throughout world wisdom. What they were getting intuitions of were the differences in the two modes of thought available to us—the highly active, results-driven surface mind and the deeper, more connective and receptive spiritual mind.
This would be why the inner soul of a man, in Jung's terminology, is his Anima, the inner feminine. And why a woman has an inner masculine, an Anima, which is not her soul (he says women are mostly soul to begin with) but is more materialistic and divisive. Hence why animus also means a tendency toward aggravation or argumentiveness.
It's weird but, when I'm in a different mode of thinking I know all this stuff. It just wasn't connecting when I thought about story.
- This entry is part 18 of 22 in the series Narrative and Poetic Form.
Series TOC
- Series: Narrative and Poetic Form
- Part 1: Introduction
- Part 2: Looking at what I call Poetic Film
- Part 3: Theater of the Absurd
- Part 4: What makes Poetic form work?
- Part 5: Poetic Narrative in film—analyzing Fires on the Plain
- Part 6: Poetic Prose
- Part 7: A Correction
- Part 8: Narrative = Masculine
- Part 9: Narrative = Masculine pt 2
- Part 10: Appollo/Dionysus
- Part 11: Film Studies—Dialectic in The New World
- Part 12: Transcendental (poetic) Style in Film
- Part 13: Film Studies—Dialectic in M*A*S*H
- Part 14: Film Studies—Dialectic in All That Jazz
- Part 15: Film Studies—Dialectic in Black Swan
- Part 16: Finito!
- Part 17: Active and Passive protags
- Part 18: Receptive
- Part 19: Protags
- Part 20: Lyrical and 'juxtapositional' novels
- Part 21: My studies into poetry and Romanticism
- Part 22: Good video on Iain McGilchrist's work
- This entry is part 18 of 22 in the series Narrative and Poetic Form.
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