Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: the Lady Audley Paradigm
- Part I Gothic Mutations
- Part II Darwinian Detections
- Part III Victorian Realisms
- 7 ‘So Like and Yet So Unlike’: Reality Effects, Sensational Letters and Pre-Raphaelite Portraits in Lady Audley's Secret
- 8 Reading Sensation/Writing Realism: Photographic Strategies in The Doctor's Wife
- 9 ‘All That is Solid Melts into Air’: Phantom Fortune and the Ghosts of Capitalism
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - ‘So Like and Yet So Unlike’: Reality Effects, Sensational Letters and Pre-Raphaelite Portraits in Lady Audley's Secret
from Part III - Victorian Realisms
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: the Lady Audley Paradigm
- Part I Gothic Mutations
- Part II Darwinian Detections
- Part III Victorian Realisms
- 7 ‘So Like and Yet So Unlike’: Reality Effects, Sensational Letters and Pre-Raphaelite Portraits in Lady Audley's Secret
- 8 Reading Sensation/Writing Realism: Photographic Strategies in The Doctor's Wife
- 9 ‘All That is Solid Melts into Air’: Phantom Fortune and the Ghosts of Capitalism
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
‘Realism’ is a very slippery concept, because it often refers to a supposed identification between reality and its narrative, painterly, photographic or cinematographic transposition. However, as far as realism in the novel is concerned, it may be more useful to take into consideration multiple notions of ‘realism’ rather than a single, unified idea. Look at the difference, for instance, between English and French approaches to the representation of ‘reality’, or even between contradicting definitions of the same term within Victorian Britain, as the following statements by Anthony Trollope, Charles Dickens and Mary Elizabeth Braddon suggest:
Among English novels of the present day, and among English novelists, a great division is made. There are sensational novels and anti-sensational, sensational novelists and anti-sensational; sensational readers and antisensational. The novelists who are considered to be anti-sensational are generally called realistic. I am realistic. My friend Wilkie Collins is supposed to be sensational. The readers who prefer the one are supposed to take delight in the elucidation of character. They who hold by the other are charmed by the construction and the gradual development of the plot. All is, I think a mistake, – which mistake arises from the inability of the imperfect artist to be at the same time realistic and sensational. A good novel should be both, and both in the highest degree. If a novel fails in either, there is a failure in art.
It does not seem to me to be enough to say of any description that it is the exact truth. The exact truth must be there; but the merit or art in the narrator, is the manner of stating the truth. As to which thing in literature, it always seems to me that there is a world to be done.
English realism seems to me the deifi cation of the commonplace. Your English realist [i.e. Anthony Trollope] lacks the grim grandeur of Balzac, who can impart an awful sublimity to the bruizes [sic] of a persecuted servant girl – or the senile sorrows of Pere Goriot. Except George Eliot there is no realist writer I care to read – & she seems to me above all criticism.
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- Information
- In Lady Audley's ShadowMary Elizabeth Braddon and Victorian Literary Genres, pp. 137 - 155Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2010