Ohio State University Press
Lost Causes: Historical Consciousness in Victorian Literature
Lost Causes: Historical Consciousness in Victorian Literature
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Perhaps perversely, Lost Causes suggests simultaneously that psychoanalysis speaks pressingly to the vexed relationship between history and narrative, and that the theory is neither a-nor anti-historical. Through his readings of Victorian fiction addressing the recent past, Jones finds in psychoanalysis not a set of truths, but rather a method for rhetorical reading, ultimately revealing how its troubled account of psychic causality can help us follow literary language's representation of the real. Victorian narratives of the recent past and psychoanalytic interpretation share a fascination with effects that persist despite baffling, inexplicable, or absent causes.
In chapters focusing on Thomas Carlyle, Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, and George Eliot, Lost Causes demonstrates that history can carry an ontological, as well as an epistemological, charge-one that suggests a condition of being in the world as well as a way of knowing the world as it really is. From this point of view, Victorianfiction that addresses the recent past is not a failed realism, as it is so frequently claimed, but rather an exploration of possibility in history.
About the Author:
Jason B. Jones is assistant professor of English at Central Connecticut State University in New Britain
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