Neo-Victorian studies is a burgeoning subfield which seeks to examine contemporary representations of the Victorian period. For the last decade, neo-Victorian scholars have offered up definitions of what makes a text “neo-Victorian”; often, this has been via a description of what the neo-Victorian is not. The ‘ruling’ definition—i.e., the definition most consistently repeated—hails from the introduction to Neo-Victorianism: The Victorians in the Twenty-First Century by Ann Heilmann and Mark Llewellyn: “the Neo-Victorian is more than historical fiction set in the nineteenth century. […] texts (literary, filmic, audio/visual) must in some respect be self-consciously engaged with the act of (re)interpretation, (re)discovery and (re)vision concerning the Victorians” (4). This short delineation significantly comes at the expense of historical fiction, which is a move repeated throughout neo-Victorian efforts to define itself. Neo-Victorian studies has largely concerned itself with literary novels, operating with a heavy anxiety that ‘other’ fiction set in the nineteenth century is escapist and nostalgic in the sense that it simply perpetuates problematic past systems of oppression while evoking the fashionable aesthetic trappings of the Victorian. My dissertation argues that contemporary genre fiction, long derided as ‘simply’ escapist in nature, can also be neo-Victorian. In each of my chapters I analyze texts from a specific genre—steampunk, popular romance, detective fiction, and Sherlock Holmes pastiche—in order to offer a basis for investigating genre fiction with a neo-Victorian lens. I analyze the depiction of corsets and feminist protagonists in three steampunk novels, explore the exhibition of unlikely romantic heroines and Romany romantic heroes in Lisa Kleypas’ historical romance series about the Hathaway family, examine representations of class and gender as well as germane social issues in Anne Perry’s William Monk detective series, and highlight the feminist potential of Carole Nelson Douglas’ series of Sherlock Holmes pastiche featuring Irene Adler. Each chapter considers the Victorian period as represented alongside Victorian novels and literary periodicals in order to demonstrate the shape of these neo-Victorian revisions and make the case the genre fiction can be self-conscious despite its lack of metafictional content.
"Dismissed outright": creating a space for contemporary genre fiction within neo-Victorian studies
Abstract
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- "Dismissed outright": creating a space for contemporary genre fiction within neo-Victorian studies
- Creators
- Lauren N. Rosales - University of Iowa
- Contributors
- Florence S. Boos (Advisor)Corey Creekmur (Committee Member)Miriam Thaggert (Committee Member)Brooks Landon (Committee Member)Teresa Mangum (Committee Member)
- Resource Type
- Dissertation
- Degree Awarded
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
- Degree in
- English
- Date degree season
- Spring 2018
- DOI
- 10.17077/etd.egwjumt2
- Publisher
- University of Iowa
- Number of pages
- vii, 243 pages
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2018 Lauren N. Rosales
- Language
- English
- Date submitted
- 08/29/2018
- Description bibliographic
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 225-243).
- Public Abstract (ETD)
The Victorian period may have been over a century ago, but it is alive and well in today’s culture nonetheless. Adaptations of classic Victorian novels inundate cinema and television, while novels set in the nineteenth century are published each year and swamp bookshelves. Neo-Victorian studies is the subfield that investigates this phenomenon, examining everything from Mary Reilly, a 1990 retelling by Valerie Martin of Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde from the perspective of Dr. Jekyll’s maid, to Margaret Thatcher’s 1983 call to return to “Victorian values” during her campaign. My dissertation identifies a conspicuous gap in neo-Victorianism, however; scholars in this area have almost entirely neglected the vast array of genre fiction that is set in the nineteenth century. Each of my chapters dissect examples from one of four genres—steampunk (the subset of science fiction), popular romance, detective fiction, and Sherlock Holmes pastiche—and demonstrates the potential of each to create compelling revisions of the Victorian period. While neo-Victorian critics have expressed anxiety about traditionally escapist modes of fiction that may revel in the aesthetic of the Victorian period at the expense of perpetuating past systems of oppression, I argue that genre fiction can also critique those systems by featuring empowering feminist heroines, presenting realistic (rather than romantic) depictions of class, highlighting social issues that still plague us today, and presenting alternate histories of empire.
- Academic Unit
- English
- Record Identifier
- 9983776976902771