安德烈·查里斯的《衰老美学:老龄化、人口与19世纪英国小说》和雅各布·朱西亚克的《老龄化、持续时间与英国小说:从狄更斯到伍尔夫的变老》(书评)

IF 0.2 3区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
{"title":"安德烈·查里斯的《衰老美学:老龄化、人口与19世纪英国小说》和雅各布·朱西亚克的《老龄化、持续时间与英国小说:从狄更斯到伍尔夫的变老》(书评)","authors":"","doi":"10.2979/vic.2023.a911134","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Reviewed by: The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel by Andrea Charise, and: Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf by Jacob Jewusiak David McAllister (bio) The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel, by Andrea Charise; pp. xlv + 194. Albany: SUNY Press, 2020, $95.00, $34.95 paper. Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf, by Jacob Jewusiak; pp. xi + 202. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020, £75.00, $108.00, $29.99, $29.99 ebook. The nineteenth century has long been fertile ground for scholars in the field of literary age studies. The disruption of traditional communities of care by urbanization, the emergence of an economic model that valorized the youthful body, and the development of medical and scientific disciplines that focused on old age all mark this period as one in which discourses of age and aging were being transformed. Two new books on the subject indicate a field that remains in rude health, with both Andrea Charise's The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel, and Jacob Jewusiak's Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf offering compelling new approaches to the study of age and aging in nineteenth-century literature. Both books are substantially focused on Victorian literature and culture, though each expands its discussion of aging across period boundaries. Charise traces the influence of Romantic conceptions of age on Victorian novelists including George Eliot, George Gissing, H. Rider Haggard, and Anthony Trollope, while Jewusiak discusses a similarly canonical range of authors including Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell, Thomas Hardy, and H. G. Wells before moving forward, in his final chapter, to consider Virginia Woolf's modernist approach to aging. They share a broadly historicist and interdisciplinary approach, with Charise's work in particular drawing on an unfamiliar selection of scientific and medical texts that cast fresh light on the construction of age throughout the nineteenth century. [End Page 354] Charise identifies an \"unprecedented … climate of crisis associated with growing old\" in the period, which first crystallized in the 1798 dispute between William Godwin and Thomas Malthus (xix). This debate ostensibly centered on the issue of population, but as Charise points out it was also fundamentally concerned with antithetical conceptions of age and aging. She describes their dispute (in a characteristically memorable phrase) as a competition between \"the imagined romance of immortality and the observed reality of dwindling food supplies\" and suggests that by recasting aging as a biopolitical problem Malthus initiated a more complex understanding of aging and generationality (2). These new conceptions of age demanded (and shaped) aesthetic representation, and in chapters on Godwin's St. Leon: A Tale of the Sixteenth Century (1799) and Mary Shelley's The Last Man (1826), Charise shows how the novel responded to that task by developing narratives of aging that challenged conventional models of human temporality. It is here, she argues, that we see the emergence of a new \"longevity narrative\" capable of grappling with this emerging sense that both age, and its normative categories, were more fluid than had previously been recognized (31). The book moves decisively onto Victorian territory in its third chapter, which offers a compelling account of how G. H. Lewes's understanding of physiological change, as expressed in The Physiology of Common Life (1859–60), helped shape Eliot's treatment of aging in Silas Marner (1861). Lewes's conception of physiological life as a constant flux between forces of waste and repair, in which waste ultimately gains the upper hand and leads to physical decay and death, offers a vision of life in which age and youth coexist, rather than functioning as discrete stages into and out of which the body passes as if crossing a threshold. Charise's illuminating reading of Silas Marner argues that Eliot took this model of \"interior physiological simultaneity\" and transposed it onto the collective context of Marner's Raveloe, to provide her with a model of idealized intergenerational reciprocity in which the interests of old and young are not seen as antithetical but mutually beneficial (76). \"Insofar as...","PeriodicalId":45845,"journal":{"name":"VICTORIAN STUDIES","volume":"8 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel by Andrea Charise, and: Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf by Jacob Jewusiak (review)\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.2979/vic.2023.a911134\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Reviewed by: The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel by Andrea Charise, and: Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf by Jacob Jewusiak David McAllister (bio) The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel, by Andrea Charise; pp. xlv + 194. Albany: SUNY Press, 2020, $95.00, $34.95 paper. Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf, by Jacob Jewusiak; pp. xi + 202. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020, £75.00, $108.00, $29.99, $29.99 ebook. The nineteenth century has long been fertile ground for scholars in the field of literary age studies. The disruption of traditional communities of care by urbanization, the emergence of an economic model that valorized the youthful body, and the development of medical and scientific disciplines that focused on old age all mark this period as one in which discourses of age and aging were being transformed. Two new books on the subject indicate a field that remains in rude health, with both Andrea Charise's The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel, and Jacob Jewusiak's Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf offering compelling new approaches to the study of age and aging in nineteenth-century literature. Both books are substantially focused on Victorian literature and culture, though each expands its discussion of aging across period boundaries. Charise traces the influence of Romantic conceptions of age on Victorian novelists including George Eliot, George Gissing, H. Rider Haggard, and Anthony Trollope, while Jewusiak discusses a similarly canonical range of authors including Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell, Thomas Hardy, and H. G. Wells before moving forward, in his final chapter, to consider Virginia Woolf's modernist approach to aging. They share a broadly historicist and interdisciplinary approach, with Charise's work in particular drawing on an unfamiliar selection of scientific and medical texts that cast fresh light on the construction of age throughout the nineteenth century. [End Page 354] Charise identifies an \\\"unprecedented … climate of crisis associated with growing old\\\" in the period, which first crystallized in the 1798 dispute between William Godwin and Thomas Malthus (xix). This debate ostensibly centered on the issue of population, but as Charise points out it was also fundamentally concerned with antithetical conceptions of age and aging. She describes their dispute (in a characteristically memorable phrase) as a competition between \\\"the imagined romance of immortality and the observed reality of dwindling food supplies\\\" and suggests that by recasting aging as a biopolitical problem Malthus initiated a more complex understanding of aging and generationality (2). These new conceptions of age demanded (and shaped) aesthetic representation, and in chapters on Godwin's St. Leon: A Tale of the Sixteenth Century (1799) and Mary Shelley's The Last Man (1826), Charise shows how the novel responded to that task by developing narratives of aging that challenged conventional models of human temporality. It is here, she argues, that we see the emergence of a new \\\"longevity narrative\\\" capable of grappling with this emerging sense that both age, and its normative categories, were more fluid than had previously been recognized (31). The book moves decisively onto Victorian territory in its third chapter, which offers a compelling account of how G. H. Lewes's understanding of physiological change, as expressed in The Physiology of Common Life (1859–60), helped shape Eliot's treatment of aging in Silas Marner (1861). Lewes's conception of physiological life as a constant flux between forces of waste and repair, in which waste ultimately gains the upper hand and leads to physical decay and death, offers a vision of life in which age and youth coexist, rather than functioning as discrete stages into and out of which the body passes as if crossing a threshold. Charise's illuminating reading of Silas Marner argues that Eliot took this model of \\\"interior physiological simultaneity\\\" and transposed it onto the collective context of Marner's Raveloe, to provide her with a model of idealized intergenerational reciprocity in which the interests of old and young are not seen as antithetical but mutually beneficial (76). \\\"Insofar as...\",\"PeriodicalId\":45845,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"VICTORIAN STUDIES\",\"volume\":\"8 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.2000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-01-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"VICTORIAN STUDIES\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.2979/vic.2023.a911134\",\"RegionNum\":3,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"0\",\"JCRName\":\"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"VICTORIAN STUDIES","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2979/vic.2023.a911134","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

书评:《衰老美学:老龄化、人口与19世纪英国小说》,作者:安德里亚·查里斯;《老龄化、持续时间与英国小说:从狄更斯到伍尔夫的变老》,作者:雅各布·杰乌西亚克·大卫·麦卡利斯特(传记);第XLV + 194页。奥尔巴尼:纽约州立大学出版社,2020年,95美元,纸张34.95美元。《变老、持续时间与英国小说:从狄更斯到伍尔夫的变老》雅各布·朱西亚克第xi + 202页。剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,2020年,75.00英镑,108.00美元,29.99美元,电子书29.99美元。19世纪长期以来一直是文学时代研究领域的学者们的沃土。城市化对传统护理社区的破坏,一种重视年轻身体的经济模式的出现,以及以老年为重点的医学和科学学科的发展,都标志着这一时期关于年龄和老龄化的论述正在发生转变。关于这一主题的两本新书表明,这一领域仍然很健康,安德烈·查里斯的《衰老美学:老龄化、人口和19世纪英国小说》和雅各布·朱西亚克的《老龄化、持续时间和英国小说:从狄更斯到伍尔夫的变老》为研究19世纪文学中的年龄和老龄化提供了令人信服的新方法。这两本书都主要关注维多利亚时代的文学和文化,尽管每本书都扩展了对老龄化的讨论,跨越了时代的界限。查里斯追溯了浪漫主义的年龄观念对维多利亚时代小说家的影响,包括乔治·艾略特、乔治·吉辛、h·里德·哈格德和安东尼·特罗洛普,而杰乌西萨克讨论了一系列类似的权威作家,包括查尔斯·狄更斯、伊丽莎白·盖斯凯尔、托马斯·哈代和h·g·威尔斯,然后在他的最后一章,考虑了弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫对衰老的现代主义方法。他们都采用了广泛的历史主义和跨学科的方法,尤其是查里斯的作品,选择了一些不熟悉的科学和医学文献,为整个19世纪的年龄结构提供了新的视角。Charise指出,在这一时期,出现了一种“前所未有的……与老龄化相关的危机气氛”,这种气氛在1798年威廉·戈德温和托马斯·马尔萨斯之间的争论中首次具体化。这场争论表面上集中在人口问题上,但正如Charise指出的那样,它也从根本上关注年龄和老龄化的对立概念。她将他们之间的争论(用一个典型的令人难忘的短语)描述为“想象中的不朽浪漫和观察到的食物供应减少的现实”之间的竞争,并建议马尔萨斯将衰老重新定义为一个生物政治问题,从而引发了对衰老和代际性的更复杂的理解(2)。这些新的年龄概念要求(并塑造)审美表现,在戈德温的《圣莱昂》的章节中:在《16世纪的故事》(1799)和玛丽·雪莱的《最后一个人》(1826)中,查里斯展示了小说是如何通过发展对衰老的叙述来挑战人类短暂性的传统模式来回应这一任务的。她认为,正是在这里,我们看到了一种新的“长寿叙事”的出现,这种叙事能够应对年龄及其规范范畴比以前认识到的更不稳定的新观念(31)。这本书在第三章中果断地进入了维多利亚时代的领域,提供了一个令人信服的描述,说明g.h.刘易斯对生理变化的理解,正如他在《日常生活的生理学》(1859-60)中所表达的那样,如何帮助艾略特在《塞拉斯·马南》(1861)中对衰老的处理。刘易斯的生理生命概念是废物和修复力量之间的不断流动,废物最终占了上风,导致身体的腐烂和死亡,这提供了一种生活的愿景,在这种生活中,年龄和青春共存,而不是像跨越门槛一样,作为身体进出的离散阶段。查莉丝对西拉斯·马南的解读颇具启发性,她认为艾略特采用了这种“内在生理同步”的模式,并将其转移到马南的《瑞福洛》的集体语境中,为她提供了一种理想化的代际互惠模式,在这种模式中,老年人和年轻人的利益不是对立的,而是互利的(76)。“只要…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel by Andrea Charise, and: Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf by Jacob Jewusiak (review)
Reviewed by: The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel by Andrea Charise, and: Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf by Jacob Jewusiak David McAllister (bio) The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel, by Andrea Charise; pp. xlv + 194. Albany: SUNY Press, 2020, $95.00, $34.95 paper. Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf, by Jacob Jewusiak; pp. xi + 202. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020, £75.00, $108.00, $29.99, $29.99 ebook. The nineteenth century has long been fertile ground for scholars in the field of literary age studies. The disruption of traditional communities of care by urbanization, the emergence of an economic model that valorized the youthful body, and the development of medical and scientific disciplines that focused on old age all mark this period as one in which discourses of age and aging were being transformed. Two new books on the subject indicate a field that remains in rude health, with both Andrea Charise's The Aesthetics of Senescence: Aging, Population, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel, and Jacob Jewusiak's Aging, Duration, and the English Novel: Growing Old from Dickens to Woolf offering compelling new approaches to the study of age and aging in nineteenth-century literature. Both books are substantially focused on Victorian literature and culture, though each expands its discussion of aging across period boundaries. Charise traces the influence of Romantic conceptions of age on Victorian novelists including George Eliot, George Gissing, H. Rider Haggard, and Anthony Trollope, while Jewusiak discusses a similarly canonical range of authors including Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell, Thomas Hardy, and H. G. Wells before moving forward, in his final chapter, to consider Virginia Woolf's modernist approach to aging. They share a broadly historicist and interdisciplinary approach, with Charise's work in particular drawing on an unfamiliar selection of scientific and medical texts that cast fresh light on the construction of age throughout the nineteenth century. [End Page 354] Charise identifies an "unprecedented … climate of crisis associated with growing old" in the period, which first crystallized in the 1798 dispute between William Godwin and Thomas Malthus (xix). This debate ostensibly centered on the issue of population, but as Charise points out it was also fundamentally concerned with antithetical conceptions of age and aging. She describes their dispute (in a characteristically memorable phrase) as a competition between "the imagined romance of immortality and the observed reality of dwindling food supplies" and suggests that by recasting aging as a biopolitical problem Malthus initiated a more complex understanding of aging and generationality (2). These new conceptions of age demanded (and shaped) aesthetic representation, and in chapters on Godwin's St. Leon: A Tale of the Sixteenth Century (1799) and Mary Shelley's The Last Man (1826), Charise shows how the novel responded to that task by developing narratives of aging that challenged conventional models of human temporality. It is here, she argues, that we see the emergence of a new "longevity narrative" capable of grappling with this emerging sense that both age, and its normative categories, were more fluid than had previously been recognized (31). The book moves decisively onto Victorian territory in its third chapter, which offers a compelling account of how G. H. Lewes's understanding of physiological change, as expressed in The Physiology of Common Life (1859–60), helped shape Eliot's treatment of aging in Silas Marner (1861). Lewes's conception of physiological life as a constant flux between forces of waste and repair, in which waste ultimately gains the upper hand and leads to physical decay and death, offers a vision of life in which age and youth coexist, rather than functioning as discrete stages into and out of which the body passes as if crossing a threshold. Charise's illuminating reading of Silas Marner argues that Eliot took this model of "interior physiological simultaneity" and transposed it onto the collective context of Marner's Raveloe, to provide her with a model of idealized intergenerational reciprocity in which the interests of old and young are not seen as antithetical but mutually beneficial (76). "Insofar as...
求助全文
通过发布文献求助,成功后即可免费获取论文全文。 去求助
来源期刊
VICTORIAN STUDIES
VICTORIAN STUDIES HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: For more than 50 years, Victorian Studies has been devoted to the study of British culture of the Victorian age. It regularly includes interdisciplinary articles on comparative literature, social and political history, and the histories of education, philosophy, fine arts, economics, law and science, as well as review essays, and an extensive book review section. An annual cumulative and fully searchable bibliography of noteworthy publications that have a bearing on the Victorian period is available electronically and is included in the cost of a subscription. Victorian Studies Online Bibliography
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信