Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Critical Missiles and Sympathetic Ink
- 1 Charles Dickens, Uncommercial Space-Time Traveller: Dombey and Son and the Ethics of History
- 2 Other People's Shoes: Realism, Imagination and Sympathy
- 3 The Personal, the Political and the Human, Part I: Sympathy – a Family Affair?
- 4 The Personal, the Political and the Human, Part II: Which Family Values?
- 5 The Personal, the Political and the Human, Part III: ‘The Torn Nest is Pierced by the Thorns’ –Sympathy after the Family
- Envoi: Sympathetic Magic
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - Other People's Shoes: Realism, Imagination and Sympathy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Critical Missiles and Sympathetic Ink
- 1 Charles Dickens, Uncommercial Space-Time Traveller: Dombey and Son and the Ethics of History
- 2 Other People's Shoes: Realism, Imagination and Sympathy
- 3 The Personal, the Political and the Human, Part I: Sympathy – a Family Affair?
- 4 The Personal, the Political and the Human, Part II: Which Family Values?
- 5 The Personal, the Political and the Human, Part III: ‘The Torn Nest is Pierced by the Thorns’ –Sympathy after the Family
- Envoi: Sympathetic Magic
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
With this sense of the splendour of our experience and of its awful brevity, gathering all we are into one desperate effort to see and touch, we shall hardly have time to make theories about the things we see and touch. What we have to do is to be for ever …courting new impressions, never acquiescing in a facile orthodoxy of Comte, or of Hegel, or of our own.
Walter Pater, The RenaissanceDombey and Son takes the chaos of history as its structuring theme. However, the very use of ‘theme’, or the combination of realism (fiction presenting what seems like a picture of the familiar world of experience) with the organised, overarching significance and unity of plot, has been interpreted as in some way already a concession to an imperio-historical conception of history as a unified, significant and teleological progress. Lennard Davis, for instance, suggests that ‘plot in narratives, and most particularly novels, helps readers to believe that there is an order in the world’, so that ‘we might say that the idea of plot is part of an idea of history – that history and novels share a certain faith in plot’. Needless to say, for the reasons suggested at the start of the last chapter, this is a very bad thing as far as Davis and like-minded critics are concerned.
I have suggested that there are elements in Dombey that resist being subsumed by the progression of plot and its structured import.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Victorian Fiction and the Insights of SympathyAn Alternative to the Hermeneutics of Suspicion, pp. 61 - 122Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2007