The Necromantics: Reanimation, the Historical Imagination, and Victorian British and Irish Literature by Renée Fox (review)

IF 0.7 1区 文学 0 LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES
Leslie S. Simon
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ISBN 978-0-8142-1549-4 (hb). <p><strong>T</strong>ucked into a long and deeply satisfying chapter on Dickensian realisms, in her incisive new study of the nineteenth-century historical imagination, <em>The Necromantics: Reanimation, the Historical Imagination, and Victorian British and Irish Literature</em>, Renée Fox utters two almost throwaway statements that caught my attention. In the first, writing of Pip in <em>Great Expectations</em> (1860–61), Fox tells us in a parenthetical aside: “I won’t deny him his moral redemption – he’s clearly less of an asshole in his middle age than he is in his youth” (94). Later in the chapter, analyzing zombie-like figures in <em>Our Mutual Friend</em> (1864–65) like Lizzie Hexam and Jenny Wren, Fox writes with feeling, “And god help those poor characters, all they want is to be allowed to be dead” (106). In the one instance, I shattered the quiet of my office with laughter; in the other, tears sprang unbidden to my eyes. In both, I felt a visceral engagement with the analysis, as Fox raised the specters of Dickens’s characters in full and fleshy form – “alive again bodies,” as she would say (8) – and bid me look at them anew.</p> <p>These two comments themselves have little bearing on the overall argument of the chapter, which posits a logistically complex interpretation of “epitaphic” and “zombie” realisms in the novels, but – to my mind – they model the kind of reading <em>The Necromantics</em> explicitly calls for, what Fox terms “resuscitative reading.” This method takes its cue from history as a discipline, which she says “exhumes, renews, resuscitates; … disintegrates distinctions between past and present; … brings back the dead as people” (15). Indeed, Fox imagines historians – and literary readers, by extension – less as time-travelers than as resurrectionists: rather than imagining ourselves backward into the past through acts of reading, we “resurrect the dead in the present moment,” thereby “giving the dead [like Pip and Jenny Wren] a second life in the present” and “making the past matter <em>now</em>” (15).</p> <p>Her approach draws heavily upon recent studies in presentism, including Rita Felski’s work on “postcritical reading,” which underscores the “dynamic interaction between reader and text” (11); Fox charts this relation upon a timeline – text/past, reader/present – and urges us to understand our reading as an historical act, one that pulls the past into the present (not <em>vice</em> <strong>[End Page 120]</strong> <em>versa</em>). According to Fox, the ultimate directive of resuscitative reading is to heartily engage the tension embedded in this historical transaction – in which we exhume old characters, settings, and storylines, and interpret them through a modern lens – and not ignore it: we must acknowledge the ways in which “our subjective energies fundamentally act upon materials with which we interact” (12) and allow those energies (like calling Pip an asshole as if he’s a person we might bump into at work tomorrow) to “give texts an experimental jolt, to push them to their limits by creatively remembering” them (12). The two lines of text that jumped out at me offer just this kind of jolt because they unapologetically display a very human, very presentist response to the novels; it is, as Fox writes, “our job as readers and critics to give the old bones we excavate new life” (12).</p> <p>Here is the simple and startling claim that sits at the heart of <em>The Necromantics</em>: the question of presentism that has engrossed nineteenth-century studies scholars for the better part of a decade – how we give the old bones we excavate new life and what the ethics of that gift are and whether it is a gift at all – engrossed the very writers whose works we study. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • The Necromantics: Reanimation, the Historical Imagination, and Victorian British and Irish Literature by Renée Fox
  • Leslie S. Simon (bio)
Renée Fox. The Necromantics: Reanimation, the Historical Imagination, and Victorian British and Irish Literature. Ohio State UP, 2023. Pp. x + 267. $69.95. ISBN 978-0-8142-1549-4 (hb).

Tucked into a long and deeply satisfying chapter on Dickensian realisms, in her incisive new study of the nineteenth-century historical imagination, The Necromantics: Reanimation, the Historical Imagination, and Victorian British and Irish Literature, Renée Fox utters two almost throwaway statements that caught my attention. In the first, writing of Pip in Great Expectations (1860–61), Fox tells us in a parenthetical aside: “I won’t deny him his moral redemption – he’s clearly less of an asshole in his middle age than he is in his youth” (94). Later in the chapter, analyzing zombie-like figures in Our Mutual Friend (1864–65) like Lizzie Hexam and Jenny Wren, Fox writes with feeling, “And god help those poor characters, all they want is to be allowed to be dead” (106). In the one instance, I shattered the quiet of my office with laughter; in the other, tears sprang unbidden to my eyes. In both, I felt a visceral engagement with the analysis, as Fox raised the specters of Dickens’s characters in full and fleshy form – “alive again bodies,” as she would say (8) – and bid me look at them anew.

These two comments themselves have little bearing on the overall argument of the chapter, which posits a logistically complex interpretation of “epitaphic” and “zombie” realisms in the novels, but – to my mind – they model the kind of reading The Necromantics explicitly calls for, what Fox terms “resuscitative reading.” This method takes its cue from history as a discipline, which she says “exhumes, renews, resuscitates; … disintegrates distinctions between past and present; … brings back the dead as people” (15). Indeed, Fox imagines historians – and literary readers, by extension – less as time-travelers than as resurrectionists: rather than imagining ourselves backward into the past through acts of reading, we “resurrect the dead in the present moment,” thereby “giving the dead [like Pip and Jenny Wren] a second life in the present” and “making the past matter now” (15).

Her approach draws heavily upon recent studies in presentism, including Rita Felski’s work on “postcritical reading,” which underscores the “dynamic interaction between reader and text” (11); Fox charts this relation upon a timeline – text/past, reader/present – and urges us to understand our reading as an historical act, one that pulls the past into the present (not vice [End Page 120] versa). According to Fox, the ultimate directive of resuscitative reading is to heartily engage the tension embedded in this historical transaction – in which we exhume old characters, settings, and storylines, and interpret them through a modern lens – and not ignore it: we must acknowledge the ways in which “our subjective energies fundamentally act upon materials with which we interact” (12) and allow those energies (like calling Pip an asshole as if he’s a person we might bump into at work tomorrow) to “give texts an experimental jolt, to push them to their limits by creatively remembering” them (12). The two lines of text that jumped out at me offer just this kind of jolt because they unapologetically display a very human, very presentist response to the novels; it is, as Fox writes, “our job as readers and critics to give the old bones we excavate new life” (12).

Here is the simple and startling claim that sits at the heart of The Necromantics: the question of presentism that has engrossed nineteenth-century studies scholars for the better part of a decade – how we give the old bones we excavate new life and what the ethics of that gift are and whether it is a gift at all – engrossed the very writers whose works we study. The Victorians were presentists too, inquiring through their own writing “whether presentism deforms or makes new shapes; whether historicism deadens or revives; whether the two are distinct from one another or whether presentism simply represents a creative attentiveness to historicism’s...

死灵学:蕾妮-福克斯(Renée Fox)所著的《复活、历史想象与维多利亚时代的英国和爱尔兰文学》(评论
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: The Necromantics:蕾妮-福克斯(Renée Fox)著,莱斯利-西蒙(Leslie S. Simon)(简历)译。The Necromantics:复活、历史想象与维多利亚时期的英国和爱尔兰文学》。俄亥俄州立大学,2023 年。页码 x + 267。$69.95.ISBN 978-0-8142-1549-4 (hb).在她对 19 世纪历史想象力的精辟新研究《亡灵论》中,有一章是关于狄更斯现实主义的,篇幅很长,令人深感满意:蕾妮-福克斯(Renée Fox)在她的十九世纪历史想象力的精辟新研究《亡灵学:复活、历史想象力和维多利亚时期的英国和爱尔兰文学》中,有两段几乎是随口说说的话引起了我的注意。第一句是写到《远大前程》(1860-61 年)中的皮普时,福克斯在旁白中告诉我们:"我不会否认他的道德救赎--他中年时显然没有青年时那么混蛋"(94)。在本章后半部分,福克斯在分析《我们共同的朋友》(1864-65)中像丽兹-海克萨姆和珍妮-沃伦这样的僵尸形象时,充满感情地写道:"上帝保佑那些可怜的人物,他们想要的只是被允许死去"(106)。在一个例子中,我的笑声打破了办公室的宁静;在另一个例子中,我的泪水不由自主地夺眶而出。在这两个例子中,我都感受到了对分析的直觉参与,因为福克斯让狄更斯笔下人物的幽灵以丰满的形式出现--正如她所说的 "又活过来的身体"(8)--并让我重新审视他们。这两段评论本身与本章的整体论点关系不大,本章对小说中的 "墓志铭 "和 "僵尸 "现实主义进行了逻辑上复杂的阐释,但在我看来,这两段评论为《亡灵论》明确要求的那种阅读提供了范本,即福克斯所说的 "复苏性阅读"。这种方法借鉴了作为一门学科的历史学,她说,历史学 "唤醒、更新、复苏;......瓦解过去与现在之间的区别;......让死人复活"(15)。事实上,福克斯将历史学家--以及文学读者--想象成时间旅行者,而不是复活者:我们不是通过阅读行为想象自己回到过去,而是 "在当下复活死者",从而 "赋予死者(如皮普和珍妮-沃伦)在当下的第二次生命","让过去现在变得重要"(15)。福克斯将这种关系描绘在一条时间轴上--文本/过去,读者/现在--并敦促我们将阅读理解为一种历史行为,一种将过去拉入现在(而不是相反)的行为。福克斯认为,"复苏性阅读 "的最终目的是要让我们全身心地投入到这一历史交易中所蕴含的张力之中--在这一交易中,我们挖掘出古老的人物、环境和故事情节,并通过现代视角对其进行解读--而不是忽视它:我们必须承认 "我们的主观能动性从根本上作用于我们与之互动的材料"(12),并允许这些能动性(比如说皮普是个混蛋,就好像他是我们明天工作时可能会碰到的人)"给文本带来实验性的冲击,通过创造性地记忆将其推向极限"(12)。令我眼前一亮的两行文字正是这种刺激,因为它们毫无保留地展示了一种非常人性化、非常当下主义的小说反应;正如福克斯所写,"作为读者和评论家,我们的工作就是赋予我们挖掘出的老骨头以新的生命"(12)。这就是《亡灵论》核心的简单而惊人的主张:十年来一直困扰着十九世纪研究学者的 "现世主义 "问题--我们如何赋予我们挖掘出的老骨头以新的生命,这种馈赠的伦理是什么,以及它到底是不是一种馈赠--困扰着我们研究其作品的作家。维多利亚时代的人也是现时主义者,他们通过自己的写作探究 "现时主义是使人变形还是创造新的形状;历史主义是使人死气沉沉还是使人焕发生机;这两者是否相互区别,或者现时主义是否仅仅代表了对历史主义的创造性关注......"。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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DICKENS QUARTERLY
DICKENS QUARTERLY LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES-
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