Confined: Pregnancy, Birth, and Class in Esther Waters (1894) and Wuthering Heights (1847)

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Haleigh R Yaspan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Victorian literary resistance to explicit discussion of female sexual reproduction mirrors the material segregation and confinement of parturient women in this era. Just as literary depictions of the pregnancy/labour of the gentry do not represent an embodied, material, clinical experience, so, too, does reproduction more generally serve as a plot device rather than an attempt to realistically and faithfully depict its nuances. Through this lens, George Moore's Esther Waters (1894) represents a fruitful contrast to Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847). For privileged characters, there is the characteristically Victorian deployment of implicature surrounding reproduction; for the poor, the punitive spectacle of visible pregnancy, birth, and childrearing. Either through its reinforcement or violation, the ubiquitous notion of Victorian propriety in the confinement room – by way of restriction and concealment – shapes our reading of the characters in these novels, as well as the messages imparted by their respective story arcs. I argue that class is a critical mediating factor in terms of both the experiences that pregnant and birthing characters are allowed, as well as the literary terms in which they are conveyed.
禁闭:Esther Waters(1894)和呼啸山庄(1847)中的怀孕、出生和阶级
维多利亚时代文学界对明确讨论女性性生殖的抵制反映了这个时代对产妇的物质隔离和禁闭。正如对贵族怀孕/分娩的文学描述并不代表一种具体的、物质的、临床的体验一样,复制也更普遍地作为一种情节手段,而不是试图真实地描绘其细微差别。通过这个镜头,乔治·摩尔的《埃丝特·沃特斯》(1894年)与艾米丽·布朗特的《呼啸山庄》(1847年)形成了富有成效的对比。对于特权人物来说,围绕着复制,有着典型的维多利亚式的暗示部署;对于穷人来说,可见的怀孕、分娩和养育子女的惩罚性场面。无论是通过强化还是违反,禁闭室里普遍存在的维多利亚式礼仪观念 – 通过限制和隐瞒 – 塑造了我们对这些小说中人物的解读,以及他们各自的故事情节所传达的信息。我认为,阶级是一个关键的中介因素,无论是从怀孕和分娩的角色被允许的经历,还是从他们被传达的文学术语来看。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
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