波克斯、散文和卖淫:男性焦虑、男性作家的神话和乔治·吉辛的《新格鲁布街》中的维多利亚晚期“交换经济”

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY Journal of Victorian Culture Pub Date : 2022-08-05 DOI:10.1093/jvcult/vcac054
Stephen Whiting
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引用次数: 1

摘要

乔治·吉辛的朋友和小说家同行,H·G·威尔斯,会记得“19世纪最后十年”是“对新作家非常有利的时期”(H·G·威尔斯)。G.威尔斯,自传实验:发现一个非常普通的大脑,第二卷(自1866年)(伦敦:Gollancz, 1934),第506页)。他的经历完全符合那个世纪流传的维多利亚时代成功男作家的神话。然而,对于绝大多数作家来说,现实却截然不同。正如许多学者所认识到的那样,乔治·吉辛1891年的小说《新格鲁布街》真实地描绘了世纪之交普通作家试图靠笔谋生的艰辛。然而,很少有研究在19世纪男性作者形象的背景下研究这些经济困境。结合对维多利亚时代男性特质的研究,对梅毒文化描述的研究,以及对19世纪市场的研究,以及当前吉辛的学术研究和主要资料,本文将论证吉辛的小说突出了卖淫和文学市场的共享“交换经济”,以探索男性作者在最后阶段的男性焦虑(Monika Pietrzak-Franger,维多利亚文学和文化中的梅毒:医学,知识和维多利亚时代的隐形奇观(Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017),第131页)。在追溯瘟疫、散文和卖淫之间的联系时,本文重新探讨了小说与维多利亚时代其他作者形象的关系,并利用对梅毒的文化描述将文本定位在一个新的领域。
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Pox, Prose, and Prostitution: Masculine Anxiety, the Myth of the Male Author, and the Late-Victorian ‘Exchange Economy’ in George Gissing’s New Grub Street
George Gissing’s friend and fellow novelist, H. G Wells, would remember the ‘last decade of the nineteenth century’ as ‘an extraordinarily favourable time for new writers’(H. G. Wells, Experiment in Autobiography: Discoveries of a Very Ordinary Brain, Volume II (Since 1866) (London: Gollancz, 1934), p. 506.). His experience fits neatly with the myths of the successful Victorian male author that were in circulation throughout the century. For the vast majority of writers, however, the reality was quite different. As many scholars have recognized, George Gissing’s 1891 novel, New Grub Street, presents a realistic portrayal of the travails of the average writer trying to live by their pen at the turn of the century. Nonetheless, little work has examined these economic travails against the backdrop of nineteenth-century images of male authorship. Bringing together work on Victorian masculinities, research on cultural depictions of syphilis, and work on the nineteenth-century marketplace alongside current Gissing scholarship and primary sources, this article will argue that Gissing’s novel foregrounds the shared ‘exchange economy’ of prostitution and the literary market to explore specifically masculine anxieties around the male author at the fin de siècle (Monika Pietrzak-Franger, Syphilis in Victorian Literature and Culture: Medicine, Knowledge and the Spectacle of Victorian Invisibility (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), p. 131.). In tracing the interconnections of pox, prose, and prostitution, this article re-negotiates the novel’s relationship with other images of Victorian authorship, as well as using work on cultural depictions of syphilis to position the text in a new field.
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