The Power of Things: The Material Turn in Neo-Victorianism
A
Review by Hatunnur Ciftci (Hatunnur.Ciftci@gcsc.uni-giessen.de)
International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture (Giessen)
Maier, Sarah E., Brenda Ayres, and Danielle Mariann Dove (eds.).
Neo-Victorian Things: Re-Imagining Nineteenth-Century Material Cultures in
Literature and Film. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022. 233 pages,
139,09 EUR. ISBN: 978-3-031-06200-1.
Abstract
Neo-Victorian Things offers material readings of popular neo-Victorian multimedia that broaden the concept of neo-Victorianism and provide new insights into our contemporary fascination with the Victorian past. Each essay in the edited volume favors a particular ‘thing’ studied through the emerging strands of material culture. The book demonstrates that the things that appear in neo-Victorian multimedia play a central role in the revival of Victorian culture, identity and history. The volume makes a timely contribution to the field by critically examining ordinary objects, from a teapot to a haunted house.
Review
The
enduring popularity of the Victorian era informs and even shapes today’s
mainstream culture ranging from fiction and video games to fashion and
architecture. What stands out in these real and imaginary worlds are the
materials that carry the memory of the past. Edited by Sarah E. Maier,
Brenda Ayres, and Danielle Mariann Dove, Neo-Victorian Things:
Re-Imagining Nineteenth-Century Material Cultures in Literature and Film
gathers compelling essays under the roof of material culture. The volume
argues that contemporary revivals of the Victorian past have been invoked
substantially by specific objects that inform about a historical moment,
person, or place. Accordingly, materiality becomes a major focal point in
each of the ten chapters of the edited volume, including the introduction,
creating a dialogue between the past and the present.
At the very outset, the volume connects with foundational works in
neo-Victorian studies that are also interested in the material, such as
the works of Ann Heilmann, Mark Llewellyn, and Cora Kaplan. While the
title of the volume signals its primary concern, the strategic choice of
the term ‘things’ hints at its methodological approach. In the
introduction, Maier and Dove unpack the terms “objects, things, and
materiality” (p. 8), which often seem identical and indicate that ‘things’
draw attention not only to the concrete objects but also to the dynamic
relationship between humans and matter. In that sense, humans and things
are mutually forming, blurring the lines between animate and inanimate and
disrupting the subject/object dichotomy. This subverted ontology that
gained ground in literary criticism with Bill Brown’s seminal essay “Thing
Theory” (Critical Inquiry, vol. 28, no. 1, 2001, p. 1–22) and the
recent developments in new materialism, phenomenology, and sensory studies
form the theoretical and methodological backbone of the volume.
Following the introduction, Rosario Aries examines Deborah Lutz’s
biography The Brontë Cabinet: Three Lives in Nine Objects (New
York 2015) through an object-oriented approach, showing how Lutz’s use of
everyday objects brings the Brontë sisters to life for contemporary
readers. Aries pays particular attention to three chapters in the
biography, but her reading of the chapter “Memory Albums” is particularly
noteworthy in terms of capturing the importance of materiality in linking
past and present. According to Aries, Charlotte Brontë’s only album, her
fern book, not only reveals a material interest in collecting during the
Victorian era but also offers a female perspective on the Victorian past
(p. 33). While the album is Charlotte Brontë’s personal property, it
simultaneously contains and objectifies her own self, her family, and
friends. This imprecise division between people and things also guides the
discussion in chapter five, where Daný van Dam explores the character-like
qualities of pianos in Jane Campion’s film The Piano (1993) and
Daniel Mason’s novel The Piano Tuner (New York 2002). In Campion’s
film, the piano is an extension of the mute protagonist Ada’s body,
allowing her to communicate and express her emotions, even becoming a
“sexual stand-in” (p. 99) for her since touching the piano mirrors
touching Ada’s body. In chapter nine, “Criminal Things: Sherlock Holmes’
Details of Detection and Their Neo-Victorian Revisions,” Sarah Maier
provides another example of how to upset the human/thing dichotomy. She
argues that, on the one hand, through interpreting and reading objects in
relation to their context, they become data for Holmes, while, on the
other hand, Holmes himself becomes an object through the narrative of his
friend Dr John Watson and the machine-like characteristics with which he
is described.
Chapters three, four, and eight focus on the ship, opium paraphernalia,
and the teapot respectively. They present stimulating examples of Elaine
Freedgood’s “strong metonymic reading” (p. 10) that requires taking
fictional objects literally to retrieve material and historical
information, beyond what literary texts cover. In line with this method,
Lewis Mondal, particularly in his reading of Charles Johnson’s Middle
Passage (New York 1990), examines the physicality of the ship as
vehicle that brings Britain and colonial America closer together. By
privileging the study of the ship, Mondal deconstructs the
center/periphery dichotomy and offers a broader and more global
understanding of neo-Victorianism beyond the borders of Britain. In
chapter four, Nadine Boehm-Schnitker surveys the material history of
opium, cultivated in India and sold in China, which is closely intertwined
with Britain’s nineteenth-century capitalist and imperialist agenda. By
analyzing Amitav Ghosh’s Sea of Poppies (London 2008) against this
historical background, Boehm-Schnitker unpacks the discourses surrounding
opium through the characters’ relationship to the substance – who has
access, how it is regulated and consumed. Like Mondal and Boehm-Schnitker,
Claire Nally traces the story of Mary Ann Cotton (1832–1873), focusing
specifically on Mary Ann’s teapot – a domestic object – as she allegedly
killed her family by lacing their tea with arsenic. The infamous teapot
was, interestingly, featured in the TV series Dark Angel (2016),
after having been displayed at the Beamish Museum. Nally comments that in
a sense this makes the teapot a proxy for Mary Ann’s body, conveying her
criminal history to contemporary audiences (p. 161).
The idea that “all matter is alive” (p. 11) marks the new materialist
approach and is aptly utilized in the discussions of Victorian dresses,
houses, and magic in chapters six, seven, and ten. Danielle Mariann Dove
examines clothes as matter with agency in Colm Tóibín’s The Master (London
2004), a neo-Victorian rewriting of the moment when the Victorian novelist
Henry James drowned the dresses of his friend Constance Fenimore Woolson
in the Venetian lagoon after her suicide in 1894. Dove discusses at length
the material qualities, tactility, and sensory responses that the clothes
evoke, in order to draw out their “agentic ability” (p. 113). Loaded with
memory and history, the inanimate clothes take on a life of their own,
functioning as one of the characters with the power to unsettle the
narrative. Like the haunted dresses, Brenda Ayres shifts perspectives on
haunted houses in neo-Victorian adaptations, arguing that the haunting is
not simply a reflection of the inhabitants’ repressed desires and troubled
psychology. Conversely, the house itself appears as “a living thing with
agency” (p. 146), that is, haunted and personified by the inhabitants’
emotions. In the final chapter, Ayres provides cross-cultural, historical
insights into the personhood of things, and offers an etymological study
of the term ‘magic’ to draw a parallel between magicians and philosophers
as people with knowledge and control over the reality of things. From this
analogy, Ayres argues that the function of neo-Victorianism, like
performing magic, is to reimagine and reshape what was in Victorian times.
Neo-Victorian Things successfully situates itself at the
intersection of neo-Victorian studies and material culture studies,
meticulously examining previously unexplored or overlooked objects. It
demonstrates the applicability of emerging strands of material culture as
an illuminating reading method, and insists on the productivity and future
potential of interpreting seemingly insignificant things. In doing so, the
volume encourages the reader to see through the embedded histories of
material things and to change the way we perceive everyday objects. Each
chapter revolves around a clearly identified focus, which is to undertake
a material reading of a specific neo-Victorian thing in order to retrieve
the knowledge and history that surrounds it. A further addition to the
volume can be read as multiplying theoretical frameworks. While many of
the contributions in the volume rely on postcolonial theory, it would
benefit from incorporating disability, ecocriticism and queer theory.
Nevertheless, the volume succeeds in vividly illustrating the centrality
of neo-Victorian objects in reviving the past and in speaking to our
current anxieties about the Victorian past. With its unique and innovative
critical approach to neo-Victorian media, the volume broadens and enriches
the concept of neo-Victorianism as it has been studied in the postmodern
tradition – thus fulfilling its main premises. It is highly recommended
for scholars in the field, or anyone simply with an interest in the
Victorian past and its relevance today. The use of reader-friendly
language and popular media makes the volume appealing not only to the
academic reader but also, as the editors dedicate it, “to lovers of
Victorian things.”
German Abstract
Die
Macht der Dinge: Die materielle Wende im Neo-Viktorianismus
Neo-Victorian Things bietet materielle Lesarten populärer
neo-viktorianischer Multimedien, die das Konzept des Neo-Viktorianismus
erweitern und neue Einblicke in unsere zeitgenössische Faszination für die
viktorianische Vergangenheit bieten. Es wird gezeigt, dass die Dinge, die
in den neo-viktorianischen Multimedien auftauchen, eine zentrale Rolle bei
der Wiederentdeckung der viktorianischen Kultur, Identität und Geschichte
spielen. Durch die kritische Auseinandersetzung mit Alltagsgegenständen,
von der Teekanne bis zum Geisterhaus, leistet das Buch einen zeitgemäßen
Beitrag zu diesem Thema.
Copyright 2024, HATUNNUR CIFTCI. Licensed to the public under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).