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Narrative and Psychology in the Victorian Novel by Anna Marie Gibson Department of English ... PDF

314 Pages·2014·4.98 MB·English
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Forming Person: Narrative and Psychology in the Victorian Novel by Anna Marie Gibson Department of English Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Nancy Armstrong, Co-Supervisor ___________________________ Kathy Alexis Psomiades, Co-Supervisor ___________________________ Rob Mitchell ___________________________ Charlotte Sussman Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of English in the Graduate School of Duke University 2014 ABSTRACT Forming Person: Narrative and Psychology in the Victorian Novel by Anna Marie Gibson Department of English Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Nancy Armstrong, Co-Supervisor ___________________________ Kathy Alexis Psomiades, Co-Supervisor ___________________________ Rob Mitchell ___________________________ Charlotte Sussman An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of English in the Graduate School Of Duke University 2014 Copyright by Anna Marie Gibson 2014 Abstract This dissertation argues that the Victorian novel created a sensory self much like that articulated by Victorian physiological psychology: a multi-centered and process- oriented body that reacts to situations and stimuli as they arise by mobilizing appropriate cognitive and nervous functions. By reading Victorian fiction alongside psychology as it was developing into a distinct scientific discipline (during the 1840s– 70s), this project addresses broader interdisciplinary questions about how the interaction between literature and science in the nineteenth century provided new ways of understanding human consciousness. I show that narrative engagements with psychology in the novel form made it possible for readers to understand the modern person as productively rather than pathologically heterogeneous. To accomplish this, fiction offered author and reader an experimental form for engaging ideas posed and debated concurrently in science. The novels I read – by authors including Charlotte Brontë, Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, and George Eliot – emerge as narrative testing grounds for constructions of subjectivity and personhood unavailable to scientific discourse. I attribute the novel’s ability to create a sensory self to its formal tactics, from composites of multiple first-person accounts to strange juxtapositions of omniscience and subjectivity, from gaps and shifts in narrative to the extended form-in-process of the serial novel. My side-by-side readings of scientific and literary experiments make it clear that fiction is where we find the most innovative methods of investigation into embodied forms of human experience. iv For Rosie And for my Dad For encouraging me to begin v Contents Abstract ......................................................................................................................................... iv   List of Figures ............................................................................................................................. viii   Acknowledgements ..................................................................................................................... ix   INTRODUCTION Form, Person, and Experiment ................................................................... 1   The Form of the Person .......................................................................................................... 5   Strategy and Tactics .............................................................................................................. 16   Overview of the Dissertation ............................................................................................... 23   Literary Experiments ............................................................................................................ 27   CHAPTER ONE The First Person in Jane Eyre and Villette .................................................... 33   I. Mind and Body: Brontë and Nineteenth-Century Personal Identity ......................... 40   II. Jane Eyre’s Narrative Strategies ..................................................................................... 54   III. Lucy Snowe’s Tactics ...................................................................................................... 66   IV. The Dancer and the Archivist ....................................................................................... 86   CHAPTER TWO Our Mutual Friend and Network Form ..................................................... 101   I. Serial Form ........................................................................................................................ 103   II. Seriality, Character, and Life in Aggregate ................................................................ 122   III. Victorian Networks: Dickens and Science ................................................................. 128   IV. The Novel as Network ................................................................................................. 134   V. Network and Affect ....................................................................................................... 145   VI. Hallucinatory Dickens .................................................................................................. 157   CHAPTER THREE Sensation and Detection ......................................................................... 162   I. Sensation and Detection in Combination ..................................................................... 168   vi II. Sensation Debates and the Science of Psychology ..................................................... 178   i. Scientific Detection and Objectivity ........................................................................ 181   ii. Sensation and the Sensory Consciousness ............................................................ 191   III. Detective Narrative, Sensational Narrative ............................................................... 201   IV. Detective Fever and Lady Audley’s Secret ................................................................... 217   V. Detection and Excess ..................................................................................................... 222   CHAPTER FOUR Daniel Deronda’s Experiments in Life ...................................................... 228   I. Eliot, Psychology, and the Novel .................................................................................. 234   II. Narrative Knowledge .................................................................................................... 240   III. Consciousness of Self .................................................................................................... 247   IV. Gwendolen’s “Subjection to a Possible Self” ............................................................ 259   V. Daniel “Transforming Influence” and Gwendolen’s “New Consciousness” ....... 266   VI. What Becomes of the “Bird’s-Eye” Perspective ........................................................ 274   VII. “A Set of Experiments in Life” .................................................................................. 280   Bibliography ............................................................................................................................... 285   Biography .................................................................................................................................... 304   vii List of Figures Figure 1: [O.S. Fowler], A phrenological chart of the head divided into over thirty images, mostly of individual people performing the faculties. (London: Straker, c. 1845); Wellcome Collection, 27921i .......................................................................................... 49   Figure 2: Image from Dickens’s working notes for the fifth installment of Our Mutual Friend. ................................................................................................... 108   Figure 3: Image from Dickens’s working notes for the seventh installment of Our Mutual Friend. ................................................................................................... 112   Figure 4: Pages 10 and 3 of Dickens’s Book of Memoranda .................................................... 116   Figure 5: Galton, Prevalent Types of Features Among Men Convicted of Larceny, 1880 ......... 222   Figure 6: Galton, Criminal Composite (New York Public Library/Science Photo Library http://sciencephoto.com) ............................................................................................... 223   viii Acknowledgements This dissertation owes its existence to the support of so many mentors, friends, and family members. My first thanks must go to my first mentors. To Rosie Davis, who taught me how to read a novel and to whom this dissertation is dedicated, and to Anne Wallace, my college advisor, whose clear-eyed passion for Victorian novels inspired me from my first week in a university classroom to keep on reading them. I have been lucky to have two incredible dissertation directors and mentors at Duke. In particular, this dissertation has been profoundly shaped by the always- generous guidance of Nancy Armstrong, whose support, determination, and attention to detail never cease to amaze me. Thank you for always pushing me one step further, for always being available, and for reading (and re-reading, and re-re-reading) these pages so thoroughly. I have learned so much from you. Kathy Psomiades has been a mentor in every sense of the word from my first day as a graduate student at Duke, providing structure when needed and sympathetic kindness at all times. Thank you for shepherding me through the stages of an early academic career and for reading my work so carefully – with that purple pen – always with an eye to what I’m trying to say. To Rob Mitchell and to Charlotte Sussman I offer my gratitude for encouraging me to broaden my perspectives and for the time you have both taken to read my work with such generosity and insight. I’m also indebted to Priscilla Wald, who reminds me every time I see her to love this work. I would like to thank the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS)/Mellon Foundation for their generous support of my work with a 2013-14 Dissertation Completion Fellowship. ix My family has surrounded me (often from afar) with loving support and care throughout this long process. I owe so much to my wonderful Mum, whose text messages from across the ocean punctuated my writing with smiles, laughter, and encouragement: “Motivate, motivate!” I also dedicate this dissertation to my Dad, not just because he has supported me in every way possible for so many years, but also because he has always made it his mission to help me believe the sky is (not quite) the limit: “Onwards and upwards!” To my “little” brother Dave, who is usually flying around that sky, and to my brothers Chris and Phil, I offer my love and thanks, as well as to Mary, CJ, Josh, Beth-Rheanna, and Ava. To my American family, Kathy and Bob, English and Rob, and, especially, James and Charles Knowles – thank you for welcoming me and for supporting me. I have been blessed to have a circle of friends in Durham always ready to pick up the phone or share a cup of coffee and talk through (or read through) the difficult parts. Thanks, especially, to Lindsey Andrews, the best reader I’ve ever had, because her comments always renew my interest in and dedication to my project. It is because of conversations I have shared with Lindsey, Layla Aldousany, Astrid Giugni, Maggie Zurawski, Calina Ciobanu, Jessica Jones, and Allison Curseen that I feel inspired to do this work. Many of these friends have read and re-read drafts and listened while I talked through ideas. A list is a poor form of gratitude, but it will have to do. Jim Knowles, although you might try to convince me that medieval literature is far more exciting than the Victorian novel, you always remind me that you really do understand what I’m working towards and that we are working towards it together. Your love and support remind me every day that this is all worth it. This is for you too. . x

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This dissertation argues that the Victorian novel created a sensory self much .. narrator shares a detached perspective with its detective, Inspector Bucket in Lincolnshire, the house in town, the Mercury in powder, and the . 10 In his overview of Victorian psychology in A Concise Companion to the
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