AbstractsPolitical Science

Out of Time? Fairy Tales and Fin-de-Siècle Temporality, Gender and Politics, 1888-1911

by Ashley Cook




Institution: University of Otago
Department:
Year: 0
Keywords: Victorian; nineteenth century; fairy tales; children's literature; J.M Barrie; Oscar Wilde; Evelyn Sharp; fin de siecle
Record ID: 1297570
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/10523/5462


Abstract

This thesis situates fin-de-siècle fairy tales, and the figure of the child, as pivotal discursive approaches through which to consider industrial modernity, with all its attendant anxieties about temporality, gender, socialism and aestheticism. It examines how the fairy tales of Oscar Wilde and Evelyn Sharp, and J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan offer an imaginative space from which to play with and negotiate fin-de-siècle concerns and conceive of alternative realities. A period of wide-scale social and political change, the fin de siècle also saw a change in the way people conceived of time, brought about by the advance of the railway and communication technology. Meanwhile, the figure of the child and the genre of the fairy tale occupied a more important place in fin-de-siècle culture than at perhaps any other period in history, as indicated by the frequent discussions in essays, articles and periodicals of the era. This thesis looks at each author’s collection in terms of a particular socio-political concern. Thus, Oscar Wilde’s fairy tales are explored with relation to Wilde’s view of “individual socialism”; Evelyn Sharp’s own, rather different fairy tales are considered in relation to her role as a social reformer, specifically with reference to her interrogation of gender; and J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan, is placed into dialogue with Walter Pater’s articulation of aesthetic temporality. Chapters one and two foreground this analysis, establishing the child and fairy tales respectively as an integral part of those fin-de-siècle debates. Chapter one highlights the period’s preoccupation with children’s creativity and imagination, and explores the way that a space, discursive and otherwise, was created for play, which was seen as being very close to that of the writer or artist in their creation of worlds. Chapter two focuses more narrowly on the attitude to fairy tales during the fin de siècle, arguing that the fairy tale was far less separated from ‘adult’ texts than is now the case. The chapter also examines the specific properties of the fairy tale genre that reflect the concern with temporality that was such a feature of fin-de-siècle modernity. Chapter three analyses the fairy tales of Oscar Wilde through the lens of his theory of “individual socialism” set out in “The Soul of Man”. Reading through this essay’s arguments against charity and suffering forces us to reconsider the tales’ endings, and to recognise the success of the child figure in enacting Wilde’s vision. Though the tales might seem to promote conventional morality, they are firmly tied into the ideas of both society and temporality expressed in the essay, and therefore can be reconnected to both the public’s more radical vision of Oscar Wilde, and to the rest of his work and vision. Chapter four analyses Evelyn Sharp’s fairy tales with regard to her questioning of conventional gender roles, and her destabilisation of supposedly essential gendered characteristics. The chapter highlights the way the tales use colour and subtle allusions to fin-de-siècle…