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Neo-Victorian Materialisms in John Fowles’s The Collector

Year 2019, , 130 - 138, 31.12.2019
https://doi.org/10.21547/jss.597690

Abstract

While John Fowles’s (1926-2005) TheFrench Lieutenant’s Woman(1969) is studied frequently as a neo-Victorian novel, his first published novel, The Collector(1963), is ignored in the critical analyses of neo-Victorian studies. This is mostly due to the fact thatThe Collector is neither a re-writing of a Victorian novel nor sets in the nineteenth century. However, a critical reading of the novel demonstrates how Fowles explicitly manifests the continuation of the Victorian materialist obsession in this particular novel. In other words, albeit the contemporary setting of the novel and the critical appreciation of it as a feminist fiction, the protagonist, Clegg’s obsession with the material objects echoes Victorian cultural materialisation in a way that leads him to collect butterflies and women. Drawing an analogy between these two collections, it is mostly argued by the critics that Fowles discusses the issues of gender in this particular novel. From a different perspective, it will be argued in this study that Fowles actually illustrates the obsession with the material objects with respect to both the dead butterfly collection and also to the commodification of the female body as the material object. From this vantage point, the aim of this study is to analyse The Collector as a neo-Victorian novel revisiting the material culture of the Victorian period and the repercussions of the traumatic relationship between the human and the object in the twentieth century. 

References

  • Blackwell, M. (Ed.) (2007). Introduction. In The secret life of things: 1-19. Lewisburg: Bucknell UP.
  • Cooper, P. (1991). The fictions of John Fowles: power, creativity, femininity. Ottowa: U of Ottawa P.
  • Foster, T. C. (1994). Understanding John Fowles. Columbia: U of South Carolina P.
  • Fowles, J. (2004). The Collector. London: Vintage.
  • Freedgood, E. (2006). The ideas in things: fugitive meaning in the Victorian novel. Chicago: U of Chicago P.
  • Kohlke, M. L. (Autumn 2008). Introduction: speculations in and on the neo-Victorian encounter. Journal of Neo-Victorian Studies, 1(1), 1-18.
  • Krueger, C. L. (Ed.) (2002). Introduction. In Functions of Victorian culture at the present time. xi-xx. Athens: Ohio UP.
  • Lever, K. M. (1976). The education of John Fowles. Critique, 21(2), 85-100.
  • Llewellyn, M. (Autumn 2008). What is neo-Victorian studies?. Journal of Neo-Victorian Studies 1(1), 164-185.
  • Loveday, S. (1985). The romances of John Fowles. London: Macmillan.
  • Miller, D. W. (1994). Calibanity: gender relationships in John Fowles’s The Collector, The Magus, and The French Lieutenant’s Woman. Unpublished Master’s Theses. Carleton University, Ottawa. Retrieved 1 May 2017 from: https://curve.carleton.ca/97783799-23f9-48a8-84e5-2ed5f5564e54 Nodelman, P. (1987). John Fowles’s variations in The Collector. Contemporary Literature 28(3), 332-46.
  • Palmer, W. J. (1974). The fictions of John Fowles: tradition, art, and the loneliness of selfhood. Columbia: U of Missouri P.
  • Phillips Buchberger, M. (2012). John Fowles’s novels of the 1950s and 1960s. The Yearbook of English Studies 42, 132-150.
  • Plotz, J. (2008). Portable property: Victorian culture on the move. Princeton: Princeton UP.
  • Salami, M. (1992). John Fowles’s fiction and the poetics of postmodernism. Cranbury, NJ: Associated UP.

John Fowles’un Koleksiyoncu Romanında Neo-Viktorya Dönemi Materyalist Yaklaşımı

Year 2019, , 130 - 138, 31.12.2019
https://doi.org/10.21547/jss.597690

Abstract










John Fowles’un (1926-2005) Fransız Teğmenin Kadını (1969) adlı romanı neo-Viktorya dönemi
romanı olarak sıkça çalışılıyorken, ilk romanı olan Koleksiyoncu (1963) neo-Viktorya dönemi çalışmaları alanında
genellikle göz ardı edilmiştir. Bunun nedeni Koleksiyoncu romanının bir Viktorya dönemi romanının yeniden yazımı
olmaması ve de 19. yüzyılda geçmemesidir. Buna rağmen, romanın eleştirel bir
gözle okunması Fowles’un bu romanda Viktorya dönemi materyalist takıntılarını
gözle görünür bir biçimde ortaya koyduğunu göstermiştir. Diğer bir deyişle,
romanın çağdaş ortamına ve feminist bir kurgu olarak eleştirilmesine rağmen,
ana karakter, Clegg’in maddi nesnelere takıntısı Viktorya dönemi kültürel nesne
bağımlılığını, kelebekleri ve kadınları toplamasına yol açacak şekilde,
yansıtıyor. Bu iki koleksiyon arasında bir analoji çizerek, eleştirmenler
çoğunlukla Fowles’un bu romanda cinsiyet meselelerini tartıştığını öne sürüyor.
Farklı bir perspektiften bakmak gerekirse, bu çalışmada, Fowles’un aslında hem
ölü kelebek koleksiyonuna hem de kadın bedeninin maddi nesne olarak
metalaştırılmasına ilişkin maddi nesnelere olan takıntıları ele aldığı
savunulacaktır. Bu noktadan yola çıkarak, bu çalışmanın amacı, Koleksiyoncu romanını, Viktorya
dönemindeki materyal kültüre ve bunun yirminci yüzyıldaki travmatik etkilerine
bakarak bir neo-Viktorya dönemi romanı olarak incelemektir.
    

References

  • Blackwell, M. (Ed.) (2007). Introduction. In The secret life of things: 1-19. Lewisburg: Bucknell UP.
  • Cooper, P. (1991). The fictions of John Fowles: power, creativity, femininity. Ottowa: U of Ottawa P.
  • Foster, T. C. (1994). Understanding John Fowles. Columbia: U of South Carolina P.
  • Fowles, J. (2004). The Collector. London: Vintage.
  • Freedgood, E. (2006). The ideas in things: fugitive meaning in the Victorian novel. Chicago: U of Chicago P.
  • Kohlke, M. L. (Autumn 2008). Introduction: speculations in and on the neo-Victorian encounter. Journal of Neo-Victorian Studies, 1(1), 1-18.
  • Krueger, C. L. (Ed.) (2002). Introduction. In Functions of Victorian culture at the present time. xi-xx. Athens: Ohio UP.
  • Lever, K. M. (1976). The education of John Fowles. Critique, 21(2), 85-100.
  • Llewellyn, M. (Autumn 2008). What is neo-Victorian studies?. Journal of Neo-Victorian Studies 1(1), 164-185.
  • Loveday, S. (1985). The romances of John Fowles. London: Macmillan.
  • Miller, D. W. (1994). Calibanity: gender relationships in John Fowles’s The Collector, The Magus, and The French Lieutenant’s Woman. Unpublished Master’s Theses. Carleton University, Ottawa. Retrieved 1 May 2017 from: https://curve.carleton.ca/97783799-23f9-48a8-84e5-2ed5f5564e54 Nodelman, P. (1987). John Fowles’s variations in The Collector. Contemporary Literature 28(3), 332-46.
  • Palmer, W. J. (1974). The fictions of John Fowles: tradition, art, and the loneliness of selfhood. Columbia: U of Missouri P.
  • Phillips Buchberger, M. (2012). John Fowles’s novels of the 1950s and 1960s. The Yearbook of English Studies 42, 132-150.
  • Plotz, J. (2008). Portable property: Victorian culture on the move. Princeton: Princeton UP.
  • Salami, M. (1992). John Fowles’s fiction and the poetics of postmodernism. Cranbury, NJ: Associated UP.
There are 15 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Literary Studies
Journal Section English Language and Literature
Authors

Emine Akkülah Doğan 0000-0002-7540-1015

Publication Date December 31, 2019
Submission Date July 28, 2019
Acceptance Date November 8, 2019
Published in Issue Year 2019

Cite

APA Akkülah Doğan, E. (2019). Neo-Victorian Materialisms in John Fowles’s The Collector. Gaziantep Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi, 18, 130-138. https://doi.org/10.21547/jss.597690