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Dissertation Defense |
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Candidate:
Jennifer
J. Carpentier Degree of:
Doctor of Philosophy Committee:
My
study of 19th-century British fiction reveals a strain of novels deeply interested
in examining the ethical implications of love relationships, in putting
forth alternative and nontraditional love stories, and in expanding
conventional notions of what constitutes a love plot.
In my examination of Anne Bronte's novels, I explore the Victorian
courtship customs that preclude empathy and intimacy between men and
women, and particularly between coquettes and their "honest" counterparts.
Next I study the philosophical and aesthetic ideals that act
as defenses against love in Henry James' The
Ambassadors and The Portrait of a Lady, and in Joseph Conrad's
Lord Jim. The
following chapter is devoted to the novels of George Eliot; I contend
that she is unmatched in her love plots that transcend the possibilities
of traditional love, and in her suggestion that different kinds of love
- later or second love, paternal love, unrequited love - can compel
powerful transformations. Finally,
my treatment of unrequited love and its redemptive capacity is more
sustained in my discussion of Charles Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities. All
of the novelists I include in this study investigate the ethical potential
of alternative love plots. In
the cases of Bronte, James, and Conrad, love's ethical potential is
more often deferred than fulfilled, whereas Eliot and Dickens are more
morally optimistic; love in their novels not only redeems its participants,
but diffusively enhances the common good of the surrounding community
as well. |
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