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Primitive marriage: Anthropology and nineteenth-century fiction.

机译:原始婚姻:人类学和19世纪的小说。

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摘要

In Primitive Marriage, however, I show that "primitivism" in imaginative literature emerged in the 1870s, when writers such as George Eliot and Thomas Hardy respond to anthropology in their fiction. These novelistic responses reflect the intensive focus of Victorian anthropology on myth and marriage, inaugurated by two influential works: Edward Burnett Tylor's Primitive Culture (1870), which focused primarily on myth, and John McLennan's Primitive Marriage (1865).;Victorian anthropologists were influenced by Walter's Scott's folklore recovery projects, since he was the first writer to apply theories of cultural evolution to the detailed study of folk culture. Under Scott's influence, moreover, novels became a unique medium that could integrate the poetry of primitive cultural forms with the naturalistic interpretive lens of the anthropologist, a productive fusion of romance and scientific social analysis. Chapter One examines precisely how Scott's fiction responds to anthropological themes and concerns raised by own folklore researches and by the proto-anthropological work of late eighteenth-century conjectural historians.;Eliot's interest in the evolution of marriage and sexuality is entirely absent from Scott's fiction, and only appears fleetingly, and suggestively, in his introduction to Roy Roy (1817), as I discuss in Chapter One. However, influential works of mid-Victorian anthropology, including McLennan's Primitive Marriage, lent scientific authority to an emerging popular association between "savage" life and sexual violence. Eliot and Hardy invoke the anthropology of marriage only to subvert it.;In Chapter Two, I explore the implications Middlemarch's allusions to anthropological descriptions of "primitive" male courtship behavior involving ritualistic fights over women. The novel aligns these ritualized expressions of desire with rhetorical forms such as chivalric love literature, and so draws attention to the culturally-constructed nature of a wide range of socially-sanctioned expressions of desire. Eliot thus stresses the commonality between diverse cultures, suggesting not only that desire transcends cultural difference, but also that human societies generally create comparable aesthetic forms to structure desire's public expression. Thus in Middlemarch, Eliot is careful to historicize everything except heterosexual relations, which are deliberately dehistoricized and transcendentalized.;Like Middlemarch, Daniel Deronda (1876) invokes an idea of "prehistoric" human emotion that is a source of ethical and loving relationships with others. However, whereas Middlemarch subverts cultural evolutionary readings of sexual behavior, Daniel Deronda reintroduces cultural evolution to explain its heroine's sexual psychology, and rejects universalizing Darwinian claims about women's biological nature, as I show in Chapter Three. Daniel Deronda's allusions to Darwin's arguments about motherhood and maternal infanticide are intertwined with allusions to the Medea story, and I argue that the novel makes these rather shocking allusions in order to expose the ways in which nineteenth-century discourse constructed womanhood as a choice between ideal motherhood and monstrosity. The novel instead dramatizes the idea that women's "primitive" or "natural" propensities are as diverse as men's, and that primitive emotions like irrational and quasi-religious fear can be harnessed as a form of conscience.;Hardy, too, was interested in the value of the primitive belief, but for its aesthetic rather than for its ethical potential. My fourth chapter shows that Hardy, along with Walter Pater and Andrew Lang, looked to Tylor's account of myth's development as a theory of literary evolution, and found in it an implication that contemporary literature might be revitalized by recuperating primitive cultural forms. I show that Hardy's research and thinking in these areas developed in early novels such as A Pair of Blue Eyes (1873), and came to fruition in The Return of the Native (1878). In Chapter Five, I show that Hardy recuperates other primitive cultural forms, including the folk dance and the ballad, in The Return and in Tess of the D'Urbervilles (1891). These novels present folk dancing in sensualized aesthetic terms as a source of primitive ecstasy and "pagan-self-adoration," implicitly celebrating folk culture as a source of resistance to Victorian sexual mores.;Hardy more explicitly invokes anthropology in the service of social critique in Jude the Obscure (1895), as my concluding chapter shows. In dramatizing contemporary debates over sexual politics, the novel's heroine, Sue, uses the terms of cultural evolutionism to denounce her society's sexual mores as "barbarous" or "savage." In this respect, the novel reflects on a major trend in 1890s public debates over sexuality and marriage: the prevalence of appeals to anthropological theories to support normative claims. The anthropologist Edward Westermarck contributed to these debates with his History of Human Marriage (1891), which suggests that sexual reform will need to accommodate inherited instincts. My chapter shows that Jude engages with Westermarck's ideas in its staging of the conflict between Victorian marriage laws and the protagonists' desires for sexual freedom, which the novel codes as Pagan and primitive. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
机译:但是,在《原始婚姻》中,我证明了想象力文学中的“原始主义”出现于1870年代,当时乔治·艾略特和托马斯·哈迪等作家对小说中的人类学做出了回应。这些新颖的反应反映了维多利亚时代人类学对神话和婚姻的高度关注,这是由两部有影响力的作品开创的:爱德华·伯内特·泰勒的《原始文化》(1870年),主要关注神话;约翰·麦克伦南的《原始婚姻》(1865年);维多利亚时代的人类学家受到影响沃尔特(Walter)的史考特(Scott)的民俗恢复项目所著,因为他是第一位将文化进化论应用于民俗文化研究的作家。而且,在斯科特的影响下,小说成为一种独特的媒介,可以将原始文化形式的诗词与人类学家的自然主义解释镜头融为一体,浪漫与科学社会分析的有效融合。第一章精确地研究了斯科特的小说如何回应人类学主题和自己的民俗研究以及十八世纪末期的猜想历史学家的原始人类学工作引起的关注。艾略特对婚姻和性的演变的兴趣完全不在斯科特的小说中,正如我在第一章中所讨论的,在他对罗伊·罗伊(Roy Roy)(1817)的介绍中,它只是短暂而有启发性地出现。但是,包括麦克伦南(McLennan)的《原始婚姻》在内的维多利亚中期人类学的有影响力的著作赋予了科学权威以“野蛮的”生活与性暴力之间新兴的流行联系。艾略特(Eliot)和哈迪(Hardy)援引婚姻的人类学只是为了颠覆婚姻。在第二章中,我探讨了米德马尔奇(Middlemarch)的典故对人类原始描写的男性求爱行为的人类学描述的含义,这种行为涉及对妇女的仪式性斗争。小说将这些仪式化的欲望表达与侠义爱情文学之类的修辞形式相吻合,因此引起人们对社会认可的一系列欲望表达的文化建构本质的关注。因此,艾略特强调了不同文化之间的共性,这不仅表明欲望超越了文化差异,而且表明人类社会通常创造出可比的美学形式来构造欲望的公开表达。因此,在米德尔马奇,艾略特小心翼翼地对除异性恋关系以外的所有事物进行历史化处理,这是故意去历史化和先验性的。;与米德尔玛奇一样,丹尼尔·德隆达(Daniel Deronda)(1876)提出了一种“史前”人类情感的观念,这种观念是与他人建立道德和热爱关系的根源。但是,尽管Middlemarch颠覆了对性行为的文化进化解读,但Daniel Deronda却重新引入了文化进化论来解释其女主人公的性心理,并拒绝普遍接受达尔文关于女性生物学特性的主张,正如我在第三章中所展示的那样。丹尼尔·德隆达(Daniel Deronda)对达尔文关于母性和母婴杀害的论点的寓言与对美狄亚故事的寓言交织在一起,我认为该小说做出了这些令人震惊的典故,以揭示十九世纪话语建构女性的方式,使女性在理想与现实之间做出选择。母性和怪物。小说反而戏剧化了这样一个观念,即女性的“原始”或“自然”倾向与男人的多样性一样,可以将诸如非理性和准宗教恐惧之类的原始情绪作为良心的一种形式。原始信仰的价值,但出于美学考虑而非出于道德潜能。我的第四章表明,哈代与沃尔特·帕特和安德鲁·朗一起将泰勒关于神话发展的论述视为一种文学进化论,并发现其中的含义是当代文学可能会通过恢复原始文化形式而得到复兴。我证明哈代在这些领域的研究和思想在诸如《一对蓝眼睛》(A Pair of Blue Eyes,1873年)等早期小说中得到了发展,并在《回归土著》(1878年)中得以实现。在第五章中,我证明哈代在《归来》和《德伯维尔的苔丝》(1891年)中恢复了其他原始文化形式,包括民间舞蹈和民谣。这些小说以感性的美学术语呈现民间舞蹈,作为原始的狂喜和“异教徒自我崇拜”的来源,隐含地庆祝民间文化作为抵抗维多利亚时代性道德的来源。;哈迪更明确地援引人类学服务于社会批判。正如我的结论所显示的那样,在《无名的裘德》(1895)中。在戏剧化的有关性政治的当代辩论中,小说中的女主角苏(Sue)使用文化进化论的术语来谴责其社会的性习俗为“野蛮”或“野蛮”。在这方面该小说反映了1890年代有关性与婚姻的公开辩论的主要趋势:流行于人类学理论以支持规范性主张。人类学家爱德华·韦斯特马克(Edward Westermarck)的《人类婚姻史》(1891)为这些辩论做出了贡献,这表明性改革需要适应继承的本能。我的章节显示,裘德在维斯特婚姻法与主角对性自由的渴望之间的冲突过程中与韦斯特马克的思想相呼应,小说将这本小说编码为异教徒和原始人。 (摘要由UMI缩短。)

著录项

  • 作者

    Noble, Mary Agnes.;

  • 作者单位

    Princeton University.;

  • 授予单位 Princeton University.;
  • 学科 Literature English.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2010
  • 页码 322 p.
  • 总页数 322
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:37:29

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