Victorianism and Contemporary Literature

Molly Clark Hillard
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Abstract

Victorianism refers to contemporary texts that cede time and space to Victorian ideologies, modes, plots, and problems. In its broadest and most contemporary definition, Victorianism describes any literary, filmic, or cultural text that signals contemporary investment in Victorian literature and culture. Such works can be loosely grouped into three categories: original plots set in the 19th century; retellings of canonical 19th-century texts; and “hybrid” texts—those that oscillate between contemporary and Victorian time frames, for instance, or those that create a new story peopled with characters from Victorian media and/or history, including narrativized stories of authors’ lives. There are persistent modes and themes across these forms, including the networking of science and technology with the human; the detective or mystery story; and the connection between the contemporary Victorian and the gothic mode. While in the 20th century the primary archive was largely white and male, the 21st century has seen the advent of a more intersectional archive and authorship. The topic is often consolidated under the term “neo-Victorian” but is also sometimes referred to as “Victoriana,” “strategic presentism,” and other designations. Specifically under the rubric of “neo-Victorian” the study is sometimes associated with postmodernism itself. Other critical interpretations hold that its organizing principle is neoliberalism and its social corollary, liberal individualism. Yet others connect the subject with cultural studies and its corollaries gender studies, queer studies, and—much more recently—postcolonial or imperial studies. Underlying all of these critical interventions is the notion that the primary affective/aesthetic register of neo-Victorian media is nostalgia and/or belatedness. Nevertheless, critical trends of the 2010s and onward theorize not the continuity but the simultaneity of the 19th and 21st centuries. This suggests exciting implications and directions in contemporary Victorianism, including responses to empire, examinations of global crises, and an expansion of the canon to include media not usually included in considerations of Victorianism.
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维多利亚主义与当代文学
维多利亚主义指的是把时间和空间让给维多利亚时代的意识形态、模式、情节和问题的当代文本。在其最广泛和最现代的定义中,维多利亚主义描述了任何文学,电影或文化文本,标志着当代对维多利亚文学和文化的投资。这些作品大致可以分为三类:以19世纪为背景的原创故事情节;19世纪经典文本的重述;还有“混合”文本——例如,那些在当代和维多利亚时代框架之间摇摆的文本,或者那些用维多利亚时代媒体和/或历史上的人物创造一个新故事的文本,包括作者生活的叙事故事。在这些形式中有持久的模式和主题,包括科学技术与人类的网络;侦探或推理小说;以及当代维多利亚风格和哥特式风格之间的联系。在20世纪,主要的档案主要是白人和男性,而在21世纪,我们看到了一个更加交叉的档案和作者的出现。这个主题通常被合并为“新维多利亚时代”,但有时也被称为“维多利亚时代”、“战略现世主义”和其他名称。特别是在“新维多利亚”的标题下,这项研究有时与后现代主义本身联系在一起。其他批评解释认为,其组织原则是新自由主义及其社会推论,自由个人主义。还有一些人将这一学科与文化研究及其推论——性别研究、酷儿研究,以及最近的后殖民或帝国研究——联系起来。在所有这些关键干预的基础上,新维多利亚媒体的主要情感/审美特征是怀旧和/或迟到。然而,2010年代及以后的批判趋势并没有将19世纪和21世纪的连续性理论化,而是将同时性理论化。这表明了当代维多利亚主义令人兴奋的含义和方向,包括对帝国的回应,对全球危机的检查,以及将经典扩展到包括通常不包括在维多利亚主义考虑中的媒体。
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