Housing the past: Victorian houses in neo - Victorian fiction
Housing the past: Victorian houses in neo - Victorian fiction
Author(s): Bożena KucałaSubject(s): Comparative Study of Literature, Other Language Literature, Theory of Literature, American Literature
Published by: Wydział Filologiczny Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku
Keywords: neo-Victorian fiction; the house in literatur; romances of the archive; interaction between past and present; double plot;
Summary/Abstract: As argued, among others, by Gaston Bachelard in The Poetics of Space (1958), a house which has been inhabited over a period of time becomes a composite of its physical structure and the mental space created by its residents’ thoughts, dreams and memories. This article analyses two contemporary novels in which houses as tangible manifestations of temporally remote experience provide a link to the Victorian past. Lauren Willig’s That Summer (2014) and Kate Beaufoy’s Another Heartbeat in the House (2015) represent the same type of neo-Victorian fiction: their plots are composed of two strands, one set in the modern age and the other in the nineteenth century, and in the course of each story parallels and convergences are revealed between the two ages and the two casts of characters. The article argues that both novels are also typical “romances of the archive” – as defined by Suzanne Keen (2001) − in which the material legacy of the past triggers a personally motivated inquiry, leading contemporary characters to uncover certain bygone mysteries, and, crucially, to recognise the past’s continuing appeal and relevance.
Journal: Crossroads. A Journal of English Studies
- Issue Year: 2022
- Issue No: 01 (36)
- Page Range: 8-21
- Page Count: 14
- Language: English