Ethereal women: Climate and gender from realism to the modernist novel
Ethereal women: Climate and gender from realism to the modernist novel
This chapter examines Charlotte Brontë’s Villette (1853), Dorothy Richardson’s Pilgrimage (1915–1938) and selections of non-fiction writing by Virginia Woolf published between 1919 and 1925. It argues that the fluid psychology we traditionally associate with twentieth-century experiments in literary form begins with the impact of nineteenth-century climate science on realist fiction. The atmospheric modes of female consciousness and ethereal embodiment that women’s presumed sensitivity to climate engenders in novels like Jane Eyre and Bleak House, thus give rise to later, feminist engagements with female authorship such as Richardson’s and Woolf’s. Taking May Sinclair’s pioneering use of the term ‘stream of consciousness’ to describe Pilgrimage in 1918 as a pivot point, the essay connects Richardson’s acknowledged debt to Villette with the climatic underpinnings that inform Woolf’s responses to both of these novels as well as her famous definition of modern fiction as ‘an incessant shower of innumerable atoms’.
Realism, Modernism, Atmosphere and gender, Stream of consciousness, Molecular physics, Victorian climate science, Charlotte Brontë, Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Woolf, John Tyndall
179-195
Cambridge University Press
Pizzo, Justine
361ed39e-7af3-446d-b290-78e5aa9acdcf
2019
Pizzo, Justine
361ed39e-7af3-446d-b290-78e5aa9acdcf
Pizzo, Justine
(2019)
Ethereal women: Climate and gender from realism to the modernist novel.
In,
Johns-Putra, Adeline
(ed.)
Climate and Literature.
(Cambridge Critical Concepts)
Cambridge.
Cambridge University Press, .
(doi:10.1017/9781108505321.012).
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Abstract
This chapter examines Charlotte Brontë’s Villette (1853), Dorothy Richardson’s Pilgrimage (1915–1938) and selections of non-fiction writing by Virginia Woolf published between 1919 and 1925. It argues that the fluid psychology we traditionally associate with twentieth-century experiments in literary form begins with the impact of nineteenth-century climate science on realist fiction. The atmospheric modes of female consciousness and ethereal embodiment that women’s presumed sensitivity to climate engenders in novels like Jane Eyre and Bleak House, thus give rise to later, feminist engagements with female authorship such as Richardson’s and Woolf’s. Taking May Sinclair’s pioneering use of the term ‘stream of consciousness’ to describe Pilgrimage in 1918 as a pivot point, the essay connects Richardson’s acknowledged debt to Villette with the climatic underpinnings that inform Woolf’s responses to both of these novels as well as her famous definition of modern fiction as ‘an incessant shower of innumerable atoms’.
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Submitted date: January 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: July 2019
Published date: 2019
Keywords:
Realism, Modernism, Atmosphere and gender, Stream of consciousness, Molecular physics, Victorian climate science, Charlotte Brontë, Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Woolf, John Tyndall
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Local EPrints ID: 418598
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/418598
PURE UUID: ffe2e4e2-a170-4cba-b55a-b9e1949b4a13
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Date deposited: 12 Mar 2018 17:30
Last modified: 17 Oct 2024 01:46
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Editor:
Adeline Johns-Putra
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