“这是一个毁灭我的阴谋”:帕梅拉和曼斯菲尔德庄园婚姻情节中女性同意的法律和文学形式

Caitlyn Jordan
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摘要

摘要:婚姻情节是18世纪中期兴起的一种常见的文学叙事方式,主要描写女主与求婚者之间的恋爱关系。然而,关于这一情节与法律的关系,特别是与十八和十九世纪的法律概念,同意和婚姻自主权的关系,却很少有人写。我的项目试图弥合这一差距。我转向了关于婚姻和性侵犯的法律理论和法庭案例,以研究18世纪和19世纪英国文学中关于同意的表现,特别是塞缪尔·理查森的《帕梅拉》(1740)和简·奥斯汀的《曼斯菲尔德庄园》(1814)中的婚姻情节。法律分析表明,当时的法律框架将同意定位为排他性和否定性的术语;除了口头的、亲眼目睹的拒绝,一切都变成了双方同意的。与此同时,文学提供了一个更具想象力的景观,其中作者和情节使拒绝的概念变得复杂,而不是指向肯定同意的愿景。帕梅拉揭示了同意和拒绝可以在沉默中构建,没有语言拒绝不构成同意。《曼斯菲尔德庄园》表明,婚姻既可以是一种欲望状态,也可以是一种条件,在这种情况下,女人的同意被纳入丈夫的行列。最后,对同意的法律和文学分析强调了作者的重要性——同意的问题可以被看作是对谁控制“情节”的调查,无论是文学作品的情节还是法庭的情节。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“So Here is a Plot to Ruin Me”: Legal and Literary Forms of Female Consent in the Marriage Plots of Pamela and Mansfield Park
Author(s): Jordan, Caitlyn | Abstract: Much has been written about the literary conventions of the marriage plot, a common narrative in literature that originated in the mid-eighteenth century and focuses on the courtship between a heroine and her suitor. However less has been written about this plot’s relationship to the law—specifically to eighteenth and nineteenth-century legal notions of consent and marital autonomy. My project attempts to bridge this gap. I turn to legal doctrines and court cases about marriage and sexual assault to examine representations of consent in eighteenth and nineteenth-century British literature, specifically in the marriage plot of Samuel Richardson’s Pamela (1740) and Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park (1814). A legal analysis reveals that legal frameworks of the time positioned consent in exclusive and negative terms; everything but a verbal, witnessed expression of refusal became consensual. Meanwhile, literature provided a more imaginative landscape in which authorship and plot complicated the notion of a refusal and gestured instead toward a vision of affirmative consent. Pamela reveals that consent and refusal can be constructed in silence—and that the absence of verbal refusal does not constitute consent. Mansfield Park demonstrates that marriage can be both a state of desire and a condition in which a woman’s consent becomes incorporated into her husband. Ultimately, a legal and literary analysis of consent highlights the importance of authorship—questions of consent can be viewed as investigations of who controls the “plot,” whether that is the plot of a work of literature or the plot of a courtroom.
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