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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Toronto :University of Toronto Press,
    UID:
    edocfu_9959156129802883
    Format: 1 online resource (192 p.)
    ISBN: 9781487574482
    Series Statement: Heritage
    Content: While there have been studies examining Trollope from a feminist perspective, very little work has taken into consideration the questions raised by contemporary critical theory. Patriarchal Desire and Victorian Discourse is unique in that it links feminist analysis with psychoanalytic theory, and brings both to bear on an examination of Trollope's writings. The feminist Lacanian analysis employed by Priscilla L. Walton offers a new perspective on the dominant Victorian cultural dynamic. She explains how the works serve as complex and ultimately double-edged exemplars of patriarchal desire and masculinist discourse. For most of his life Trollope sought to gain acceptance to a privileged social group, from which he was initially excluded as a result of his class. Walton begins with his situation as presents it in An Autobiography in order to place the author historically, as a man whose social position granted him a useful vantage point from which to comment on the implications of the hierarchical structure of Victorian culture. Walton then explores the six novels which comprise the Palliser series, a series devoted to the depiction of Victorian political life. She focuses on the portrayal of women in these texts, and explores the contradictions apparent in their characterizations. As feminist critics have argued, Trollope dramatizes strong and frequently sympathetic female character who are, nonetheless, ultimately thwarted in their desire for independence. Walton contends that Trollope's treatment of female characters reflect the ways in which conventional social orders rest upon the objectification of women in order to affirm a singular construction of male subjectivity. Informed by arguments drawn primarily from feminist psychoanalytic theory, but also from post-colonial, narrative, and deconstructive scholarship, Walton's readings demonstrate how Trollope's Victorian discourse provides insights into current attempts to disenfranchise women. She then illustrates how such writings can serve as a means of consolidating female strength through their covert revelation of the importance of women's conventional position to traditional social structures. Walton, therefore, offers an alternative perspective on Trollope's fiction, and by extension, that of other Victorian novelists, and, as she does so, she contributes to the ongoing theoretical dialogue surrounding discursive agency and feminist politics.
    Note: Frontmatter -- , Contents -- , Acknowledgments -- , 1. The Politics of Desire in An Autobiography -- , 2. Subject(ed) Desire in Can You Forgive Her? -- , 3. Desire, Control, and Suppression in Phineas Finn -- , 4. Desire and Displacement in The Eustace Diamonds -- , 5. Subjectivity and Masquerade in Phineas Redux -- , 6. Ego Drives and Difference in The Prime Minister -- , 7. Desire and Disenfranchisement in The Duke's Children -- , Conclusion: Discourse and Desire -- , Notes -- , Selected List of Works Consulted -- , Index , In English.
    Language: English
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