cies becomes the Surrealistic version of the femme fatale. More subhuman and brutal than her 19th-century predecessors, she testifies to the higher level of sexual anxiety and hostility experienced by the 20th-century male. For as women increasingly demanded a share of the world, the defense of male authority became more desperate: Now become a fellow being, woman seems as formidable as when she faced man as a part of alien Nature. In place of the myth of the la- borious honeybee or the mother hen is substi- tuted the myth of the devouring female insect: the praying mantis, the spider. No longer is the female she who nurses the little ones, but rather she who eats the male.® Pictures of nudes in nature also affirm the supremacy of the male consciousness even while they ostensibly venerate or pay tribute to women as freer or more in harmony with nature than men. From the Bathers of Delacroix to those of Renoir and Picasso, nude-in-nature pictures almost always ascribe to women a mode of existence that is categorically different from man’s. Woman is seen as more of nature than man, less in opposition to it both physi- cally and mentally. Implicitly, the male is seen as more closely identified with culture, “the means by which humanity transcends the giv- ens of natural existence, bends them to its pur- poses, controls them in its interests.”” This woman/nature-man/culture dichotomy is one of the most ancient and universal ideas ever devised by man and is hardly new to modern Western culture. However, in Western bourgeois culture, the real and important role of women in domestic, economic and social life becomes ever more recognized: increasingly, the bourgeoisie educates its daughters, de- pends upon their social and economic coopera- tion and values their human companionship. Above all, the idea that women belong to the same order of being as men is more articulated than ever before. In this context, to cling to ancient notions of women as a race apart from men —as creatures of nature rather than of cul- ture—is to defend blatantly an ideology that is everywhere contested and contradicted by ex- perience. Nevertheless, the majority of nude-in- nature pictures state just this thesis. In countless 19th- and 20th-century paintings —Romantic, Symbolist or Expressionist—fe- male nudes in outdoor settings are treated as natural inhabitants of the landscape. Although modern artists have characterized it differently, they agree that this woman-nature realm is an inviting but alien mode of experience. It both attracts and repels the male. It beckons him to step out of rationalized, bourgeois society and to enter a world where men might live through their senses, instincts or imaginations. But the condition of entry —shedding the social identity of the bourgeois male—also entails loss of au- tonomy and of the power to shape and control one’s world. The male artist longs to join those naked beings in that other imagined realm, but he cannot because he fails to imagine their full humanity —or his own. While he values his own instincts, or that part of himself that responds to nature, he regards this portion of his nature as “feminine,” antagonistic to his socialized mas- culine ego, and belonging to that other, “natu- ral” order. Nor can he acknowledge in women a “masculine principle”—an autonomous self that knows itself as separate from and opposed to the natural, biological world. Like Munch before his Madonna, he hovers before his dream in ambivalent desire. Rarely do modern artists imagine naked men in that other realm. When they do, as in works by Cézanne or Kirchner, the male figures tend to look uncomfortable or self-conscious. More often, the male in nature is clothed—both in the literal sense or metaphorically —with a so- cial identity and a social or cultural project. He is a shepherd, a hunter, an artist. Matisse’s Boy With Butterfly Net (1907) is a magnificent image of a male in nature (or rather a male acting against nature), highly individualized and properly equipped for a specific purpose. In beach scenes by the Fauves and the Kirchner circle, males—when they are present—are not “bathers,” i.e., placid creatures of the water, but modern men going swimming in bathing suits or in the raw. They are active, engaged in a culturally defined recreation, located in histori- cal time and space. The female bather, who has no counterpart in modern art, is a naked exis- tence, outside of culture. Michelet, the 19th- century historian, poetically expressed the ideas implicit in the genre: man, he wrote, creates history, while woman: 49