Embodied Violence Towards Nonhuman Animals in Anne Bronte's Agnes Grey

被引:0
|
作者
Stevens, Valerie L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Shepherd Univ, Dept English & Modern Languages, Shepherdstown, WV 25443 USA
关键词
Anne Bronte's Agnes Grey; violence; embodied cruelty; embodied mercy; literary  studies; feminist animal studies; sympathy; nineteenth century;
D O I
10.1163/15685306-BJA10056
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Aware of her pupil's plans to torture and kill a nest of birds, and with no authority to stop him based on her class, gender, and professional positions, the governess-heroine of Anne Bronte's (2010/1847) Agnes Grey kills the nonhuman animals to keep them from needless suffering. Building on Bronte scholarship as well as animal studies understandings of violence and embodiment, this article considers expectations that Victorian sympathy will be a simplistic and pretty play on reader emotions to argue that nineteenth-century sympathetic feeling was more theoretically and ethically complex than we might imagine. Agnes Grey demonstrates how human-animal violence was thought to be an acceptable expression of middle-and upper-class masculinity, while proper women were expected to be complicit with this treatment of nonhumans. By looking at the close relationship between wanton and merciful embodied violence, the article shows how grotesque Victorian human-animal sympathy could be.
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页码:679 / 694
页数:16
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