Unsolved Seas and the Victorian Novel

Matthew P. M. Kerr
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Abstract

This chapter attends to nineteenth-century texts where the sea lurks in the background—as the context for a sojourn or a crossing or a memory, or as a figurative element. The first part of the discussion shows how the Victorian novel’s sprawl and supposed formlessness were sometimes negotiated through marine objects, experiences, and metaphor. Particular attention is paid to a sea-shell metaphor used by George Eliot. The other sections examine three canonical Victorian novels: William Makepeace Thackeray’s Vanity Fair, Charles Dickens’s David Copperfield, and Charlotte Brontë’s Villette. These texts reveal a set of authors who were to varying degrees attracted by the sea, unsure about the depth of their commitment to it, and interested in making imaginative use of that same irresolution. The chapter also contains a short discussion of Victorian sea-poetry, in which the more rigorous formal structures of verse discipline marine vagueness.
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未解的海洋和维多利亚时代的小说
这一章关注的是19世纪的文本,在这些文本中,大海潜伏在背景中——作为旅居、穿越或记忆的背景,或作为一个比喻的元素。讨论的第一部分展示了维多利亚时代小说的蔓延和所谓的无形性有时是如何通过海洋物体、经验和隐喻来达成的。特别要注意的是乔治·艾略特使用的贝壳隐喻。其他部分考察了维多利亚时代的三部经典小说:威廉·梅克皮斯·萨克雷的《名利场》,查尔斯·狄更斯的《大卫·科波菲尔》和夏洛特Brontë的《维莱特》。这些文本揭示了一组作者,他们在不同程度上被大海所吸引,不确定他们对它的承诺的深度,并有兴趣在想象力上利用同样的犹豫不决。这一章还包含了对维多利亚时代海洋诗歌的简短讨论,其中诗歌更严格的形式结构规范了海洋的模糊性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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