What the Eye Cannot See: Interior Landscapes in Mansfield Park

被引:5
|
作者
Park, Julie [1 ]
机构
[1] Vassar Coll, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 USA
来源
关键词
Camera obscura; Eighteenth-century landscape design; Fanny Price; Free indirect discourse; Ha-ha wall; Imagination; Interiority; Jane Austen; Joseph Addison; Mansfield Park; Narrative technique; Pleasures of the imagination; Relationship between literature and landscape;
D O I
10.1353/ecy.2013.0015
中图分类号
I0 [文学理论];
学科分类号
0501 ; 050101 ;
摘要
Austen's Mansfield Park (1814) indicates the wide-ranging significance that popular devices for perceptual illusion such as the camera obscura carry when it constructs one of its morally pregnant moments around the "ha-ha" at Mr. Rushworth's estate. A sunken ditch that creates the illusion of a boundary-less perspective, the ha-ha functions as a model for the dark room - camera obscura-of the heroine's mind. Like the ha-ha, Fanny's mind neutralizes the boundaries that exclude her and allows her to inhabit the space that belongs to others. It is through this novel's renderings of Fanny's interior life through the narrative technique of free indirect discourse that we may witness the way fiction and landscape design came to function as related mediums for the invisible pains and pleasures of the imagination by the time the long eighteenth century came to a close. Copyright © 2013 University of Pennsylvania Press. All rights reserved.
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页码:169 / 181
页数:13
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