The Gothic Family Romance: Heterosexuality, Child Sacrifice, and the Anglo-Irish Colonial OrderDuke University Press, 1999 - 291 páginas Tales of child sacrifice, demon lovers, incestual relations, and returns from the dead are part of English and Irish gothic literature. Such recurring tropes are examined in this pioneering study by Margot Gayle Backus to show how Anglo-Irish gothic works written from the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries reflect the destructive effects of imperialism on the children and later descendents of Protestant English settlers in Ireland. Backus uses contemporary theory, including that of Michel Foucault and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, to analyze texts by authors ranging from Richardson, Swift, Burke, Edgeworth, Stoker, and Wilde to contemporary Irish novelists and playwrights. By charting the changing relations between the family and the British state, she shows how these authors dramatized a legacy of violence within the family cell and discusses how disturbing themes of child sacrifice and colonial repression are portrayed through irony, satire, "paranoid" fantasy, and gothic romance. In a reconceptualization of the Freudian family romance, Backus argues that the figures of the Anglo-Irish gothic embody the particular residue of childhood experiences within a settler colonial society in which biological reproduction represented an economic and political imperative. Backus's bold positioning of the nuclear family at the center of post-Enlightenment class and colonial power relations in England and Ireland will challenge and provoke scholars in the fields of Irish literature and British and postcolonial studies. The book will also interest students and scholars of women's studies, and it has important implications for understanding contemporary conflicts in Ireland. |
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Página 7
... play Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching toward the Somme and Jennifer Johnston's novel How Many Miles to Babylon ? McGuinness's and Johnston's works exemplify the incorporation of the gothic within literary realism as a means to make ...
... play Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching toward the Somme and Jennifer Johnston's novel How Many Miles to Babylon ? McGuinness's and Johnston's works exemplify the incorporation of the gothic within literary realism as a means to make ...
Página 12
... play Baglady as a paradigm of the symbolic position of women within the Irish colonial family romance ; I then consider Jennifer Johnston's depiction of contemporary Protestant / Catholic intrafamilial relations , reading her novel The ...
... play Baglady as a paradigm of the symbolic position of women within the Irish colonial family romance ; I then consider Jennifer Johnston's depiction of contemporary Protestant / Catholic intrafamilial relations , reading her novel The ...
Página 27
... play The Dreaming of the Bones , Devorgilla , an errant wife , precipi- tates the arrival of Norman troops in Ireland through an act of sexual abandonment and betrayal that provokes her husband into seeking for- eign allies . Condren ...
... play The Dreaming of the Bones , Devorgilla , an errant wife , precipi- tates the arrival of Norman troops in Ireland through an act of sexual abandonment and betrayal that provokes her husband into seeking for- eign allies . Condren ...
Página 33
... played out within Ireland under and in the wake of British colonial rule . Both embody the crucial connection between capitalist social re- lations and religious forms inscribed within individuals and the nuclear family in the crucible ...
... played out within Ireland under and in the wake of British colonial rule . Both embody the crucial connection between capitalist social re- lations and religious forms inscribed within individuals and the nuclear family in the crucible ...
Página 56
... play , Richardson's novel ties these ideological materials directly to specific , painful transformations in subjectivity within con- temporary society . As Clarissa's dilemma illustrates , even though the surveillance of women for ...
... play , Richardson's novel ties these ideological materials directly to specific , painful transformations in subjectivity within con- temporary society . As Clarissa's dilemma illustrates , even though the surveillance of women for ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Gothic Family Romance: Heterosexuality, Child Sacrifice, and the Anglo ... Margot Gayle Backus Vista previa limitada - 1999 |
Términos y frases comunes
Anglo-Irish Anglo-Irish family appears appropriation authority Big House body bonds bourgeois British Burke Burke's calls capitalism Catholic central century changes chapter child Clarissa colonial concerning connection constituted continue conventions cultural daughter death demonic depictions desire domestic domination early economic effect emergence England English established experiences expressed family's father fear female figure final forces forms gender gothic hands heterosexual homosexual House identity imperial individual instance institutional internal Ireland Irish land later Laura literature living Lois male marriage means mother narrative nature never novel nuclear observes origins parents passage past pattern period play points political position present Press production Protestant reading reflects relations relationship representations represents response role scene secret settler colonial sexual simultaneously social society story structure suggests Swift symbolic tells texts tion University violation woman women writing York
Pasajes populares
Página 94 - Society is, indeed, a contract. Subordinate contracts for objects of mere occasional interest may be dissolved at pleasure, but the state ought not to be considered as nothing better than a partnership agreement in a trade of pepper and coffee, calico or tobacco, or some other such low concern, to be taken up for a little temporary interest and to be dissolved by the fancy of the parties.
Página 95 - It is a partnership in all science, a partnership in all art, a partnership in every virtue, and in all perfection. As the ends of such a partnership cannot be obtained in many generations, it becomes a partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born.
Página 85 - Sixthly, this would be a great inducement to marriage, which all wise nations have either encouraged by rewards or enforced by laws and penalties.
Página 84 - Secondly, the poorer tenants will have something valuable of their own which by law may be made liable to distress, and help to pay their landlord's rent, their corn and cattle being already seized, and money a thing unknown.
Página 85 - ... men would become as fond of their wives during the time of their pregnancy as they are now of their mares in foal, their cows in calf, or sows when they are ready to farrow, nor offer to beat or kick them (as it is too frequent a practice) for fear of a miscarriage.
Página 93 - ... Society requires not only that the passions of individuals should be subjected, but that even in the mass and body as well as in the individuals, the inclinations of men should frequently be thwarted, their will controlled, and their passions brought into subjection. This can only be done by a power out of themselves ; and not, in the exercise of its function, subject to that will and to those passions which it is its office to bridle and subdue. In this sense the restraints on men as well as...
Página 171 - THE DOLLS A DOLL in the doll-maker's house Looks at the cradle and bawls: 'That is an insult to us.' But the oldest of all the dolls, Who had seen, being kept for show, Generations of his sort, Out-screams the whole shelf: 'Although There's not a man can report Evil of this place, The man and the woman bring Hither, to our disgrace, A noisy and filthy thing.
Página 84 - For first, as I have already observed, it would greatly lessen the number of Papists, with whom we are yearly over-run, being the principal breeders of the nation, as well as our most dangerous enemies...
Página 46 - Children are so much the goods, the possessions of their parents, that they cannot, without a kind of theft, give away themselves without the allowance of those that have the right in them...
Página 18 - Indeed the whole effort at replacing the real father by a superior one is only an expression of the child's longing for the happy, vanished days when his father seemed to him the noblest and strongest of men and his mother the dearest and loveliest of women.
Referencias a este libro
The Routledge Companion to Gothic Catherine Spooner (Ph. D.),Emma McEvoy Sin vista previa disponible - 2007 |
Anna Parnell's Political Journalism: Contexts and Texts Beverly E. Schneller Vista previa limitada - 2005 |