

An edition of Daughters of the house (1992)
modes of the gothic in Victorian fiction
By Alison Milbank,John Rylands
Publish Date
1992
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Language
eng
Pages
217
Description:
Daughters of the House radically revises critical assumptions about the Victorian woman's relation to the house, through new readings of novels by Wilkie Collins, Dickens, Charlotte Bronte and Sheridan Le Fanu. Tracing their various transformations of eighteenth-century Gothic, the book discovers a revision of gender power relations in works such as Bleak House, in which Dickens embraces a program of the redemption of public action by women. Le Fanu and Bronte are shown to merge the Gothic with an apocalyptic critique of society, involving a paradoxically simultaneous expansion of and yet breaking out from private domestic space. In Le Fanu's version woman becomes angel beyond the confines of a debased patriarchal order. It is argued that this "female" Gothic thematic includes a genuine emancipatory dimension whereas, against most current feminist readings, this is denied to Wilkie Collins's deployment of the "sensation heroine". His fiction is controversially read in terms of the release of women into the market as commodities, in order for them to be returned to a sexualized domestic enclosure. The book ends by aligning the Gothic heroine's project to contemporary debates in French feminism, and in particular to the work of Luce Irigaray.
subjects: Daughters in literature, Dwellings in literature, English Horror tales, English fiction, Gothic revival (Literature), History and criticism, Horror tales, English, ((Das)) Phantastische, Roman, Schauerroman, Das Phantastische, Englisch, Frau (Motiv), Gothic novel, Haus (Motiv), Literatur, English fiction, history and criticism, 19th century, Horror tales, history and criticism, Women in literature, Criticism and interpretation
Places: Great Britain
Times: 19th century