The Ontological Work of Genre and Place: Wuthering Heights and the Case of the Occulted Landscape

被引:3
|
作者
Goodlad, Lauren M. E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Rutgers State Univ, English & Comparat Literature, New Brunswick, NJ 08854 USA
关键词
'WUTHERING-HEIGHTS'; PHILOSOPHY; HISTORY; SLAVERY;
D O I
10.1017/S1060150319000639
中图分类号
I [文学];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
This essay shows how genre and place enable the "ontological reading" of narrative fiction. Such sense-making dialectics enable readers to infer the terms of existence that shape fictional worlds. World-systems thinkers have theorized the critical premise of material worlds shaped though ongoing processes of combined and uneven development. Ontological reading is a comparative practice for studying the narrative work of "figuring out" those processes-for example, through the "occulted landscapes" of Yorkshire noir. Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights () can be likened to a species of crime fiction in prefiguring the "hardboiled" pull from epistemological certainty to ontological complication. Whereas David Peace's millennial Red Riding series of novels and films palimpsestically layers multiple pasts and presents, Wuthering Heights' photomontage-like landscape airbrushes the seams of combined and uneven histories. Both narratives evoke moorland terrains conducive to a long history of woolens manufacturing reliant on the energized capital and trade flows of Atlantic slavery. Both works body forth occulted landscapes with the capacity to narrate widely: their troubling of ontological difference-between human and animal, life and death, past and present, nature and supernature-lays the ground for generically flexile stories of regional becoming. Ontological reading thus widens literary study.
引用
收藏
页码:107 / 138
页数:32
相关论文
共 50 条