“Fast lapsing back into barbarism”: Social Evolution, the Myth of Progress and the Gothic Past in Late-Victorian Invasion and Catastrophe Fiction

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Ailise Bulfin
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Abstract

While neo-barbarian dystopian futures are typically associated with contemporary popular culture, they were not, in fact, uncommon in late-Victorian popular fiction, especially in the politically charged, future-oriented popular fiction subgenres of invasion fiction and catastrophe fiction. Focusing on a representative tale from each subgenre – George Griffith’s Olga Romanoff (1894) and Richard Jefferies’ After London (1885) – this article shows how they made innovative use of the gothic to show the future following a large-scale war or natural disaster as a decline back into an exaggerated version of the barbaric past. Reworking the familiar gothic trope of doomed inheritance, the tales showed nemesis occurring not on an individual or familial level, but on an extensive societal scale in keeping with their sweeping narratives of mass death and its aftermath. In presenting a post-catastrophe relapse to barbarism, the tales were extrapolating from the social evolution theories of Herbert Spencer and Walter Bagehot which, though delineating the forward tendency of western social progress, allowed the fearful corollary that in periods of crisis advanced societies might also regress. While popular fiction’s engagement with theories of biological degeneration has been well researched, engagements with these theories of societal reversion have received less attention. Applying them to invasion and catastrophe fiction elucidates how the tales used their regressive futures to warn hubristic nineteenth-century modernity about its potential comeuppance if it continued to either aggressively militarise or unthinkingly exploit the non-human world, two major negative social tendencies which were the source of considerable contemporary anxiety.
“迅速倒退回野蛮”:维多利亚晚期入侵与灾难小说中的社会进化、进步神话与哥特过去
虽然新野蛮人的反乌托邦未来通常与当代流行文化联系在一起,但事实上,它们在维多利亚晚期的流行小说中并不罕见,尤其是在充满政治色彩、面向未来的流行小说亚类入侵小说和灾难小说中。这篇文章聚焦于每个亚类的一个代表性故事——乔治·格里菲斯的《奥尔加·罗曼诺夫》(1894年)和理查德·杰弗里斯的《伦敦之后》(1885年)——展示了他们如何创新地利用哥特式来展示大规模战争或自然灾害后的未来,将其倒退为野蛮过去的夸张版本。这些故事改写了人们熟悉的哥特式比喻,即注定要继承遗产,表明复仇不是在个人或家庭层面上发生的,而是在广泛的社会范围内发生的,这与他们对大规模死亡及其后果的全面叙述相一致。这些故事是根据赫伯特·斯宾塞(Herbert Spencer)和沃尔特·白芝浩(Walter Bagehot)的社会进化理论推断的,虽然描绘了西方社会进步的前进趋势,但却得出了一个可怕的推论,即在危机时期,先进社会也可能倒退。虽然流行小说对生物退化理论的参与已经得到了很好的研究,但对这些社会逆转理论的参与却很少受到关注。将它们应用于入侵和灾难小说,揭示了这些故事是如何利用它们倒退的未来来警告傲慢的十九世纪现代性,如果它继续激进地军事化或不假思索地利用非人类世界,它可能会受到惩罚,这两种主要的负面社会趋势是当代相当焦虑的根源。
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
Victorian Popular Fictions
Victorian Popular Fictions Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
审稿时长
16 weeks
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