This study examines the modernist fiction by three transnational women writers who turned to the ocean in their writing during the first half of the twentieth century to navigate their divided or hyphenated national identities. The Anglo-Irish writer Elizabeth Bowen (1899-1973), the Finland-Swedish author Hagar Olsson (1893-1978), and the New Zealand short story writer of English descent, Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923), use ocean space in their fiction, in the form of both sea imagery and material seascape settings, to unsettle ideologically limiting and culturally anchored categories of identity, gender, class, place and time. The modernist aesthetics and marginal ethics of these white colonial women who existed at a slant to the geographical and cultural center of the British, masculine metropolis pivot on two competing ocean views. First, the sea features in their work as a historically compliant, smooth surface in the service of the establishment, enabling and justifying imperial expansion and colonial settlement, as well as defining and patrolling the uncompromising borders of the land-based modern nation state. Alternately, the ocean comes to disrupt progressive imperial models of history, to inspire fluid and transgressive ideologies, to bear witness to violent histories submerged by official records, and to confound our sense of scale and chronological time through outsized subterranean ecologies that blur the line between land and water, and, as a consequence, throw into question larger fundamental, ontological distinctions, such as that between the ‘human’ and the ‘non-human,’ or ‘more-than-human.’ By bringing postcolonial and ecocritical perspectives to bear on Bowen, Mansfield and Olsson’s literary representations of the ocean, my study contributes to the current expanding reach of modernist studies, ushering into the critical spotlight global regions previously overlooked and misfit writers traditionally dismissed, to locate that which modernity originally defined itself against at the vibrant heart of that construction.
Ocean views: women's transnational modernism in fiction by Elizabeth Bowen, Hagar Olsson, and Katherine Mansfield
Abstract
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Ocean views: women's transnational modernism in fiction by Elizabeth Bowen, Hagar Olsson, and Katherine Mansfield
- Creators
- Lisa Marie Jackson - University of Iowa
- Contributors
- Mary Lou Emery (Advisor)Florence Boos (Advisor)Marie Kruger (Committee Member)Jennifer Buckley (Committee Member)Claire Fox (Committee Member)
- Resource Type
- Dissertation
- Degree Awarded
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
- Degree in
- English
- Date degree season
- Autumn 2018
- DOI
- 10.17077/etd.c0t6-b8pu
- Publisher
- University of Iowa
- Number of pages
- viii, 208 pages
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2018 Lisa Marie Jackson
- Language
- English
- Date submitted
- 03/01/2019
- Description illustrations
- illustrations
- Description bibliographic
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 192-208).
- Public Abstract (ETD)
The ocean troubles us. The dangerous depths, constant movement and undeniable strangeness of oceans resist the kind of human mapping, control, measurement and knowledge that is possible on land. This study deals with literary troublemakers, specifically colonial women writers of the modernist period, who realized the productive potential of troubling oceans in their fiction in the first half of the twentieth century. In this project, I read the Anglo-Irish writer Elizabeth Bowen (1899-1973) alongside the Finland-Swedish author Hagar Olsson (1893-1978) and the New Zealand short story writer of English descent, Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923), whose very national identities are all products of historic sea crossings. The sea features in their writing as the vehicle for European imperialism, as it laid the world at the feet of the British naval power in the nineteenth century and ensured a particular hierarchical world order. But the ocean also appears in the writing of Bowen, Olsson and Mansfield in a different, more troublesome guise. The ocean comes to disrupt ruling power structures by challenging the neat borders and fixed identity categories integral to the land-based modern nation state. The writers use the ocean both as metaphor and material presence in their narratives to question engrained definitions of identity, gender, class, place and time. Highlighting misfit women writers who straddle several cultural contexts and suffer from a sense of un-belonging allows me to interrogate modernist studies as a critical field and include marginal or difficult texts previously excluded from the literary canon.
- Academic Unit
- English
- Record Identifier
- 9983776602502771