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Copyright De Gruyter Open Sp. z o.o. Jun 2013

Abstract

The present close re-reading draws on the combined appreciation of perversity as (i) formal figuration in which the bearings of the original are reversed, (ii) attitudinal disposition to proceed against the weight of evidence (the so-called 'being stubborn in error'). Applying, as suggested paradigmatically by Edgar Allan Poe's notorious purloined letter, the formula of the excessively obvious, the obtrusively self-evident clue placed before the eyes of the whole world, "Wakefield" can be read as a missive that has been turned like a (French) glove inside out, redirected and resealed.5 Even though we do not know anything at all about the narrator - it is a transparent, unthematized and nonreferential entity, no more than a supposed person - we are very likely to accept it is a man, especially since the immediate story is about a man.6 It is commonplace to point out that in human history both the 'I' and the 'eye' of the text, its vertical as well as its horizontal dynamic and dimension, have been predominantly and on the whole unproblematically naturalized as male, as a bland hand-me-down or presumptive one-size-fits-all 'normalcy'. A matter equally of broad cultural scripts and institutional frameworks, of entrenched cognitive pathways, of epistemic and behavioural patterns, both the creator and the spectator have been androcentrically (ultimately phallogocentrically) presumed to be men.7 In her by-now-classic essay on how theories of fiction tend to exclude women writers by design, Baym (1981: 139) notes that since the literary act has been traditionally perceived as a selfbegetting attempt by the author to 'father' oneself, then all acts of writing by women are definitionally both perverse and absurd. A compound risk involved in any nominal interactional communication, Mrs. Wakefield would have been well (self-) advised that in the early nineteenth century to write freely and boldly as a woman, to engage and indulge as a pronounced begetter in écriture feminine, would have been tantamount to sentimentally throwing oneself testimonially helplessly open.8 Rather than exposing herself as I- woman, the key witness of her stigmatic jettisoned condition - in her subaltern case a pathetic second order of limitation - Hawthorne's wife can be recuperatively reconceived as displacing a forlorn 'I' with a perverse 'eye'.

Details

Title
HAWTHORNE'S PERSPECTIVAL PERVERSITY: WHAT IF "WAKEFIELD" WERE (ABOUT) A WOMAN?; OR, CREDO QUIA ABSURDUM1
Author
Semrau, Janusz
Pages
45-84
Section
LITERATURE
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Jun 2013
Publisher
De Gruyter Poland
ISSN
00816272
e-ISSN
20825102
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1645149677
Copyright
Copyright De Gruyter Open Sp. z o.o. Jun 2013