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The other woman: Secondary heroines in the nineteenth-century British and *American novel.

机译:另一个女人:19世纪英国和*美国小说中的次要女主角。

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摘要

In a recurrent pattern in the nineteenth-century novel, authors introduce two female characters, only to focus on one and appear to forget the other. My dissertation examines this other woman: the “secondary heroine.” The protagonists of Romantic novels are written to embody stable national identities, suggesting a transatlantic history of the Romantic novel in which both British and American authors equate the primary heroine with a cultural ideal of femininity. Yet both traditions challenge that cultural ideal through the figure of the secondary heroine. My dissertation demonstrates how authors initially deployed the “other woman” to suppress alternative images of womanhood and nationhood, but eventually embraced the secondary heroine as the centerpiece of the Realist novel.;In the first three chapters, I pair British and American novels and examine the secondary heroine as a challenge to generic and nationalist constraints. I divide the Romantic novel into three separate subgenres: the epistolary novel, as exemplified by Samuel Richardson's Clarissa (1747–8) and Hannah Webster Foster's The Coquette (1797); the Gothic and its inheritors in the cult of sensibility, represented by Ann Radcliffe's A Sicilian Romance (1790), Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility (1811), and James Fenimore Cooper's The Pioneers (1823); and the historical romance in Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe (1820) and Catharine Maria Sedgwick's Hope Leslie (1827). By pairing British and American texts of similar genres, I underscore the secondary heroine as a site of difference who reveals anxieties over unstable national identities.;The Realist novel reversed the roles of “primary” and “secondary” heroines, preferring dangerous women to conventional heroines. My fourth chapter traces the role of the secondary heroine in theories of Realism. I argue that the Realist novel works to contain dangerous women through two narrative strategies: acculturation and resistance. My final chapter turns to the heroines of Henry James's The Golden Bowl (1904). Situated at the cusp of Realism and Modernism, James's novel provides a fitting endpoint for my study: the construction of national identity via multiple marriage plots anticipates the fragmentation of identity and multiple narrators that characterize the modernist novel, erasing the distinction between primary and secondary heroines.
机译:在19世纪小说的一种反复出现的模式中,作者介绍了两个女性角色,只是专注于一个而似乎忘记了另一个。我的论文研究了另一个女人:“次要女主角”。浪漫主义小说的主人公被写成体现稳定的民族身份,暗示了浪漫主义小说的跨大西洋历史,其中英美两国作家都将主要女主角等同于女性化的文化理想。然而,两种传统都通过次要女主人公的形象挑战了这一文化理想。我的论文证明了作者最初是如何使用“另一个女人”来压制女性形象和民族形象的,但最终却接受了次要女主角作为现实主义小说的核心。在前三章中,我将英美小说进行配对并考察次要女主角是对通用和民族主义约束的挑战。我将浪漫主义小说分为三类:书信小说,例如塞缪尔·理查森(Samuel Richardson)的《克拉丽莎》(Clarissa,1747–8年)和汉娜·韦伯斯特·福斯特(Hannah Webster Foster)的《风骚》(The Coquette,1797年)。哥特及其敏感者的继承者,以安·拉德克利夫的《西西里浪漫史》(1790年),简·奥斯丁的《感觉与情感》(1811年)和詹姆斯·费尼莫尔·库珀的《先锋》(1823年)为代表;以及沃尔特·斯科特爵士(Sir Walter Scott)的《艾芬豪(Ivanhoe)》和凯瑟琳·玛丽亚·塞奇威克(Catharine Maria Sedgwick)的Hope Leslie(1827)中的历史浪漫史。通过配对类似类型的英美文本,我强调了次要女主角是一个差异化的场所,它揭示了对不稳定的民族身份的焦虑。现实主义者的小说颠倒了“主要”和“次要”女主角的角色,偏向危险的女性而不是传统的女性。女英雄。我的第四章追溯了次要女主人公在现实主义理论中的作用。我认为现实主义小说通过两种叙事策略来遏制危险女性:适应和抵抗。我的最后一章转向亨利·詹姆斯(Henry James)的《金碗》(The Golden Bowl)(1904)中的女主角。詹姆斯的小说处于现实主义和现代主义的风口浪尖,为我的研究提供了一个合适的终点:通过多重婚姻情节的民族身份建构预示着身份的分裂和代表现代主义小说特征的多重叙述者,从而消除了主要和次要女主角之间的区别。 。

著录项

  • 作者

    Camden, Jennifer Bonnie.;

  • 作者单位

    The Ohio State University.;

  • 授予单位 The Ohio State University.;
  • 学科 Literature Modern.;Literature English.;Literature American.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2005
  • 页码 278 p.
  • 总页数 278
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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