Uneasy Sensations: Smollett and the BodyUniversity of Chicago Press, 15.10.1995 - 201 Seiten Tobias Smollett, a key figure in the British tradition of comic fiction, has often been criticized for the extreme physicality of his writing, which teems with scatological images and graphic depictions of bodily injury and disintegration. Challenging scholars who have dismissed Smollett's preoccupation with the body as simply crude, Uneasy Sensations clarifies his sophisticated ideas about human physicality and his contribution to eighteenth-century literature. Aileen Douglas draws on feminist and other new theoretical perspectives to reassess Smollett's entire body of fiction as well as his classic work of nonfiction, Travels through France and Italy. Like many writers of his time, Douglas argues, Smollett was interested in the body and in how accurately it reflects internal disposition. But Smollett's special contribution to the eighteenth-century novel is his emphasis on sentience, the sensations of the physical body. Looking at such works as The Adventures of Roderick Random, The Expedition of Humphry Clinker and The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, Douglas explores the ways Smollett uses representations of sentienceespecially torment and pain - in his critique of the social and political order. Trained in medicine, Smollett was alert to the ways in which the discourses of medicine, philosophy, and law construct the body as an object of knowledge, and yet his work always returns to the physical world of the body and its feelings. Smollett reminds us, as Douglas aptly puts it, that "if you prick a socially constructed body, it still bleeds". Uneasy Sensations reveals Smollett as a writer from whom contemporary readers can learn much about the body's relation to politics and society.Shedding new light on classic works, it is an important contribution to an understanding of eighteenth-century British-literature. |
Inhalt
CHAPTER | 1 |
CHAPTER | 27 |
CHAPTER THREE | 43 |
CHAPTER FOUR | 70 |
CHAPTER FIVE | 95 |
CHAPTER | 130 |
CHAPTER SEVEN | 162 |
189 | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adventures animal argues atom atom's bodily Boucé Bramble Bramble's cause Celinda century characters Confronted Critical cultural David Hume death deny Descartes detail discourse eighteenth eighteenth-century Emilia England English Fathom feeling female body Ferdinand fiction Gil Blas give Greaves hero hero's History human body human physicality Hume Humphry Clinker Hutcheson hypochondriac implication Jery John Locke Lady Vane language Launcelot letters literary Locke London Lucretius luxury marriage material matter Matthew Bramble Memoirs ment mind mock-heroic moral Narcissa narrative narrator Nathaniel nature notion novel object Oxford passage passions Peregrine Pickle Peregrine's philosophy physical experience political punishment reader representation represents Robert Whytt Roderick Random satire satirist scene sensation sense sentience sexual signs sion Smelfungus social society soul story sublime suggests Tabitha terror Terry Eagleton ticklish tion Tobias Smollett Travels tures understanding University Press Vane's victims Whytt woman women writing Ximian
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