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Writing the Past, Writing the Future - Time and Narrative in Gothic Sensation Fiction (Hardcover)
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Writing the Past, Writing the Future - Time and Narrative in Gothic Sensation Fiction (Hardcover)
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This book links popular British fiction from the 1790s through the
1860s to anxieties about time. The cataclysm of the French
Revolution, discoveries in geology, biology, and astronomy that
greatly expanded the age and size of the universe, and
technological developments such as the railway and the telegraph
combined to transform the experience of time and dramatize its
aporetic nature-time as inarticulable contradiction. Themes of
usurpation, bigamy, and stolen identity that characterize popular
fiction during this period reflect anxieties about inheritance.
Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France
characterizes English history as an unbroken and orderly chronicle
of property, generations, and values, in contrast to the chaotic
events taking place in France. Albright uses Burke's "sure
principle of transmission" as the idealized, coherent view of time
as narrative and argues that many popular novels of this period
encode discourses on temporality in which time's aporias are
imaginatively reconciled through a variety of narrative strategies.
Ann Radcliffe's The Mysteries of Udolpho, written during the Terror
of the French Revolution, uses a past setting, descriptions of
sublime and picturesque landscapes, and the heroine's prolonged
suspension between memory and expectation to create a dreamy
temporality that offers an antidote to revolutionary fears. Charles
Robert Maturin's Melmoth the Wanderer employs narrative to
"humanize" what Frank Kermode calls the "disorganized time"
represented by "the interval between tick and tock," an effort that
assumes greater importance in response to industrialization's
dehumanizing effects. Mary Shelley's The Last Man capitalizes on
the Romantic theme of "lastness," weaving together memory and
prophecy to attain a narrative perspective that encompasses the
whole of human history. Albright concludes with a chapter on the
sensation novels of the 1860's, which bring Gothic themes of
usurpation from the distant past to the contemporary world of
railways and divorce courts. Writing the Past, Writing the Future
offers a fresh approach that focuses less on feminist and
psychoanalytic approaches to Gothic and sensation fiction than on
the contemporary temporal anxieties often encoded in these popular
genres. While there has been some criticism that has dealt with
temporal discourses within individual works-most notably, The Last
Man?there has not been a wider exploration of the topic that
encompasses the period from about 1790 to 1870. Rather than attempt
an exhaustive survey of a large number of novels, Albright has
focused on several key texts from this period, analyzing them with
the aid of the temporal meditations of Aristotle, Augustine, and
Heidegger, as well as Paul Ricoeur's work on the relationship
between time and narrative.
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