Warning: if you have not watched all of American Horror Story Season 1, there are massive spoilers ahead!
American Horror Story co-creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk wanted to create a TV series that truly scared people. And they’ve definitely succeeded in their goal. But why the hell are they so afraid of abortion and women’s reproduction?
American Horror Story co-creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk wanted to create a TV series that truly scared people. And they’ve definitely succeeded in their goal. But why the hell are they so afraid of abortion and women’s reproduction?
Inspired
by The Exorcist, Rosemary’s Baby and The Shining, the creepy, eerie and
phenomenally acted and well-written show follows the Harmons -- cellist Vivien (Connie Britton),
psychiatrist Ben (Dylan McDermott) and their daughter Violet (Taissa Farmiga) -- as
they move from Boston to Los Angeles to heal over past traumas of a stillbirth
and infidelity. They move into an old haunted mansion in this “violent,
erotically charged horror story about a troubled family.”
American Horror Story
sucked me in immediately. Besides passing the Bechdel Test many times, strong,
clever, interesting women abound. The performances by Connie Britton, Jessica Lange, Dylan McDermott, Frances Conroy and Taissa Farmiga are outstanding.
Britton, who co-headlines the first season,
wanted Vivien “to
be somebody that was accessible, somebody who was strong and not victim-y.
Which is something that’s always really important to me, no matter what I’m
playing.” Britton
almost didn’t play Tami Taylor in the TV show of Friday Night Lights didn’t want to merely play a coach’s wife
on a show “dominated by men” and have her character “fall into the background.”
Murphy has called the bravura Constance (Jessica Lange) a "survivor" and according to Britton, he called Vivien “‘a
heroic character’ and describes American Horror Story as a horror for women.”
A horror for women? Sounds promising. Ahhhh but not so fast!
If the show is for women, why do we see women objectified,
conflating sexualized images with rape, assault and violence. And why the hell
is it obsessed with demonizing abortion and pregnancy??
In the series premiere, we first encounter Vivien in a
gynecological exam (after a brutal stillbirth) and her doctor prescribes her
hormones. Eco-friendly Vivien, who uses organic products and doesn’t like using
anything synthetic, responds:
“I’m
just trying to get control of my body again, especially after what happened.”
That line might just be the most prophetic in the series.
The female characters’ bodies are continuously invaded, brutalized and
dominated.
In the series premiere, Vivien is raped by the Rubber Man,
thinking she’s having sex with Ben but who’s really ghost Tate. At the end of
the episode, we learn Vivien’s pregnant…with twins…by two different fathers. It’s
crystal clear that as soon as Vivien gets pregnant, she’s having a “mystical
pregnancy” and will give birth to a demon baby. Vivien has a nightmare that she
can see a hand (paw or claw??) moving underneath her swollen pregnant stomach. In
“Open House,” the obstetrician tells Vivien and Ben that “every woman worries
she’s got a little devil inside her.” We’re also told several times that one of
Vivien’s twins is growing at an alarmingly rapid rate. Vivien eats cooked offal
and later ravenously devours raw, bloody brains, paralleling the liver-eating
scene in Rosemary’s Baby. Murphy
attributes this to the baby having “demonic
cravings.”Angie, the ultrasound technician, faints when conducting Vivien’s
ultrasound. When she meets with Vivien later in a church, Angie tells her that
she saw the devil on the sonogram, “the unclean thing, the plague of nations,
the beast.”
As the fabulous Anita
Sarkeesian at Feminist Frequency,
in her outstanding “Tropes vs. Women” video series, writes:
“It’s
common practice for Hollywood writers to have their female characters become
pregnant at some point in their TV series. These story lines are almost always
built around women who have their ovaries harvested by aliens or serve as human
incubators for demon spawn – basically the characters are reduced to their
biological functions.”
Sarkeesian goes on to quote Laura Shapiro who called the
Mystical Pregnancy “a type of reproductive terrorism:”
“…It
makes becoming pregnant seem disgusting, frightening and nightmarish…The
problem from my point of view is that pregnancy and birth are natural processes
that are being distorted into torture porn, ways of punishing women and
exploiting their terror to up the dramatic stakes.”
After she learns of Vivien’s pregnancy, Hayden (Kate Mara), Ben’s
student who he had an affair with (and who’s killed after she tells Ben she’s
keeping their baby), becomes obsessed with stealing Vivien’s baby. And if one
babystealer wasn’t enough, Constance and former house dwellers Nora (Lily Rabe)
and Chad (Zachary Quinto) conspire to steal Vivien’s unborn baby too.
Babysnatching! Cause that’s what all women and gay men do. Oh wait, that’s what
all “crazy” women do…Wait, aren’t all women “crazy???” (The show’s treatment of
mental illness is a topic for a WHOLE other post).
As each of these characters can’t procreate (Constance due
to her age, Hayden and Nora as they’re dead, Chad a man…who’s now dead), they
covet Vivien’s capacity for reproduction. They objectify Vivien, reducing her
to a vessel, an incubator for the baby these characters so desperately yearn to
possess.
Vivien’s pregnancy is in many ways the crux of the show.
Even on the poster, a pregnant Vivien arches her back seductively as the Rubber
Man hovers above with outstretched hands, as if waiting to pluck the baby from
her womb.
In “Piggy Piggy,” Leah, Violet’s former bully, tells Violet
the devil is real. She discloses information in the Book of Revelations from
the Bible:
“In
heaven, there’s this woman in labor, howling in pain. There’s a red dragon with
7 heads, waiting so he can eat her baby. But the archangel Michael, he hurls
the dragon down to earth. From that moment on, the red dragon hates the woman
and declares war on her and all her children. That’s us.”
In “Spooky Little Girl,” medium Billie Dean tells Constance
that a child conceived by a human and a ghost (Vivien and rapist Tate) would
result in the antichrist and would bring about the apocalypse. In the
penultimate episode, when Vivien gives birth, scenes flash between the horrific
current situation of Vivien dying -- a scene inspired by the film Demon Seed -- and Vivien and Ben’s joyous
delivery of Violet 16 years earlier. But Vivien dies in childbirth, giving
birth to one baby who lives (and who’s a murderous sociopath) and one who dies.
In fact the entire season, from the first episode to the
last, revolves around Vivien and her pregnancy who inevitably becomes the allegorical
“Woman of the
Apocalypse.” Hmmm, so we should all fear women because they could at any
moment incite the end of the world.
According to American
Horror Story, we shouldn’t just be terrorized by pregnancy. All aspects of
reproduction should scare the shit out of us, including abortion.
In the title sequence for each episode, we see jars of
aborted fetuses on the shelves in the basement --again fueling the fire of fear
and disgust surrounding abortion. It feels like the messages implied here are
“good” women don’t get abortions and abortions are gross and scary. Don’t
believe me? Trust me, it gets reinforced over and over again. In fact, because
of the macabre show’s obsession with abortion, Feminist Film renames it “American
Abortion Story.”
Abortion is discussed throughout the series. Vivien and
Constance (who says her “womb is cursed”) talk about abortion after Vivien
worries something’s wrong with her baby. After the Harmons move to LA, Ben
returns to Boston to accompany Hayden to get an abortion. We witness her
emotional instability after Ben checks his phone (because you know, no one in
their right mind would choose to get an abortion…eyeroll!). Then Hayden changes
her mind and decides to keep the baby…which she never has since she’s murdered.
In the 3rd episode, when Vivien takes the “Eternal
Darkness” house tour,” she discovers the history of the Montgomerys and
Charles’ “Frankenstein complex.” In 1922, surgeon Charles Montgomery and his
socialite wife Nora lived in the house. When they need more money to pay their
bills, Nora arranges for Charles to perform illegal abortions on young women.
The “Eternally Damned” tour guide also condemns the
Montgomerys’ performing abortions: “But the souls of the little ones must have
weighed heavy upon them as their reign of terror climaxed in the shocking finale
in 1926.” Reign of terror? Is that what you call abortions?? At first I thought
I must have missed something…perhaps the girls were being murdered. But nope.
The abortions are the “reign of terror.” Lovely.
As Tami at What Tami Said astutely points out, the inception of the
house’s evil, its pull in harboring pain, despair and tortured souls, all stems
from one person: an abortionist. Oh and to hammer home the point that abortion
equates to evil, the episode is entitled “Murder House.”
In another episode, we learn in a flashback that one of the
women’s boyfriends, angered by her abortion, kidnaps Nora and Charles’ baby
Thaddeus and murders him. Charles “reconstructs” Thaddeus (aka the “infantata”)
with the baby’s body parts, animal parts and the heart of one of the aborted
fetuses. Nora tells Charles she tried to breastfeed him but it wasn’t milk the
baby was craving. We witness bloody claw marks above her breasts. Nora goes on
to say:
“We’re
damned Charles because of what we did to those girls, those poor innocent girls
and their babies.”
So basically Murphy and Falchuk are saying, “Fuck you,
reproductive justice!”
Think Progress’ Alyssa Rosenberg
finds American Horror Story “seems to suggest that the end of a pregnancy
before term, whether by miscarriage, abortion, or murder, is the ultimate
expression of evil. Abortion Gang’s
Sophia rightfully condemns the series as an “abortion
horror story” and “anti-choice
propaganda at its worst.” Tami at What
Tami Said criticizes the series for its “conservative
and anti-choice messages” including “doctors who perform abortions are
bad;” “women who receive abortions are promiscuous and selfish, therefore bad;”
“abortion = murdering babies.”
By portraying Charles and Nora as greedy, preying on young
girls reinforces the notion that all abortion providers are greedy, evil
predators. And American Horror Story
isn’t telling us that illegal, back-alley abortions are bad. No, it’s telling
us ALL abortions are bad.
The most terrifying aspect of American Horror Story isn’t the shocking gore or gasping plot
twists. When our reproductive rights face a daily barrage of attacks, it’s
frightening that the series so blatantly perpetuates myths surrounding the fear,
stigma and shame of abortion and pregnancy. Reducing women to their reproductive organs, we're told women’s
sexuality and reproduction should scare us and as a result, women’s bodies should be punished
and controlled. I’m getting so fucking sick and tired of ignoring sexism, misogyny
and anti-choice bullshit just to watch TV.

2 comments:
hmmm nice piece. but i can't say i agree with the angle. this show is a bit fantastical, but i don't think it perpetuates a stereotype. but you have given me something to think about :)
Thank you! That's okay if you don't agree with me(not that you need me to tell you that!). Dissent is a good thing! I'm glad you enjoyed though :)
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