首页> 外文学位 >Gendered pathologies: The female body and biomedical discourse in the nineteenth-century English novel (Thomas Hardy, H. Rider Haggard, Charles Dickens).
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Gendered pathologies: The female body and biomedical discourse in the nineteenth-century English novel (Thomas Hardy, H. Rider Haggard, Charles Dickens).

机译:性别病理:19世纪英国小说(托马斯·哈迪,H。里德·哈加德,查尔斯·狄更斯)中的女性身体和生物医学话语。

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摘要

This dissertation examines nineteenth-century literary representations of the pathologized female body in relation to biomedical discourses about gender and society in Victorian England. Beginning in the late eighteenth century and continuing throughout the nineteenth, science and medicine gave particular attention to the female body, connecting bourgeois ideas about social transgression to scientific concepts. The woman who did not conform to the dictates of gender ideology was, biologically speaking, aberrant: a deviation from the norm. Yet, as I am arguing, the “deviant” woman was not a marginal figure but symbolically central as a literary and cultural trope. In the novels I am examining here—by Charles Dickens, H. Rider Haggard, and Thomas Hardy—the pathologized female body stands in for a social sphere threatened with cultural, moral, or physical decline.; In approaching this issue, I examine the convergence of gendered science with a biological model of human society used in the social sciences. Within the context of evolutionary thought and the emergent field of the social sciences, the social sphere was envisioned as a biological system—literally, a “social body.” This social body was linked metaphorically to the individual human organism, leading on the one hand to theories about the “natural” organization of the social world, and on the other to a view of the British people as a race or species. My study looks at the way in which ideas about the female body and the social body merged in literary works of the second half of the nineteenth century, providing imaginative resolutions to vexing social problems. In Dickens's Hard Times, Haggard's She, and Hardy's Jude the Obscure the deviant female body represents problems in the larger social domain which are then resolved, contained, mapped, or simply displaced through an implied diagnosis of female sexual pathology. In each of these texts, I trace the varying ways gender and biological paradigms adapt themselves to different cultural circumstances.
机译:本文研究了十九世纪文学史上女性病态的文学表现形式,与维多利亚女王时代英格兰关于性别和社会的生物医学论述有关。从18世纪末开始一直持续到整个19世纪,科学和医学特别关注女性身体,将资产阶级关于社会犯罪的观念与科学观念联系起来。从生物学上讲,不符合性别意识形态要求的女人是异常的:偏离规范。但是,正如我所说的那样,“过分”的女人并不是一个边缘人物,而是象征性地作为文学和文化上的缩影。在我正在检查的小说中,查尔斯·狄更斯,H。里德·哈格德和托马斯·哈迪在这里进行了研究。在探讨这个问题时,我研究了性别科学与社会科学中使用的人类社会生物学模型的融合。在进化思想和社会科学新兴领域的背景下,社会领域被设想为一个生物系统,从字面上讲,是一个“社会主体”。这个社会机构在隐喻上与人类个体联系在一起,一方面导致有关社会世界“自然”组织的理论的产生,另一方面导致英国人将其视为种族或物种。我的研究着眼于在十九世纪下半叶的文学作品中,关于女性身体和社会身体的观念融合在一起的方式,为解决社会问题提供了富有想象力的解决方案。在狄更斯的,哈格德的 She 和Hardy的 Jude the Obscure 中,异常的女性代表了较大社会领域中的问题,这些问题随后得以解决,通过隐含的女性性病理诊断而包含,映射或仅移位。在每一篇文章中,我都追溯了性别和生物学范式如何适应不同的文化环境。

著录项

  • 作者

    Archimedes, Sondra M.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Santa Cruz.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Santa Cruz.;
  • 学科 Literature English.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2003
  • 页码 262 p.
  • 总页数 262
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 I561;
  • 关键词

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