Reading the Body in Dickens’s Bleak House and Our Mutual Friend

  • Zeynep Harputlu Shah Siirt University
Keywords: Victorian body, grotesque, Charles Dickens, vulnerability, identity
Agencies: King's College London, Ministry of National Education in Turkey

Abstract

This article examines the ways in which the Victorian body and identity were being transformed in the mid-nineteenth century and identifies three distinctive ways the biological and normative boundaries of the body were violated as represented in Dickens’s fiction: the grotesque body, the vulnerable body and the dead body. In this sense, Dickens’s Bleak House (1851-53) and Our Mutual Friend (1864-65) present creative and challenging literary responses to the Victorian body abjected through deprivation, physical vulnerability and death. In the novels, the grotesque body challenges the abject via a tragicomic and hybrid representation of the body and of character. Regarding the vulnerable body, the study elaborates on a body “out-of-control”, threatening the boundaries between the object and the subject, inside and outside, by holding a liminal state through ill-health, excessive labour, starvation and physical degradation. Finally, it is argued that there was an intimate and abject relationship between the living and the dead bodies in the capital, beside prevalent infant deaths, high mortality rates, diseased bodies and overflowing graveyards in the city.

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Author Biography

Zeynep Harputlu Shah, Siirt University

Dr. Zeynep Harputlu Shah received her MA and PhD degrees in English Literature from King’s College London (KCL) and graduated in 2015. Her PhD thesis examines urban abjection in the mid-and late nineteenth century novels by Charles Dickens, George Gissing and Arthur Morrison. She is currently an assistant professor of nineteenth-century British literature in the School of Foreign Languages at Siirt University, Turkey. Her research interests include Victorian and Edwardian literature, Victorian railways, urban history, technology and literature, theories of subjectivity and everyday life, theories of space and place, and urban novels by Dickens, Gissing and Morrison.

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Published
2019-10-04
How to Cite
Harputlu Shah Z. (2019). Reading the Body in Dickens’s Bleak House and Our Mutual Friend. Complutense Journal of English Studies, 27, 275-292. https://doi.org/10.5209/cjes.61471
Section
Articles