Unravelling the Body/Mind Reverberations of Secrets Woven into Charlotte Brontë’s Villette

The pervasive psychological realism of Charlotte Brontë’s Villette (1853) challenges scholarly assumptions based on her biography or her indoctrination to Victorian medical discourses, as it explores dysfunctional body/mind interrelations, particularly those evidencing patriarchal pressures and prej...

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Main Author: Cortés Vieco Francisco José
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2015-07-01
Series:Prague Journal of English Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/pjes-2015-0002
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spelling doaj-b813fe28928d4f499c4413f484fb31542021-09-05T13:59:45ZengSciendoPrague Journal of English Studies2336-26852015-07-0141254510.1515/pjes-2015-0002pjes-2015-0002Unravelling the Body/Mind Reverberations of Secrets Woven into Charlotte Brontë’s VilletteCortés Vieco Francisco JoséThe pervasive psychological realism of Charlotte Brontë’s Villette (1853) challenges scholarly assumptions based on her biography or her indoctrination to Victorian medical discourses, as it explores dysfunctional body/mind interrelations, particularly those evidencing patriarchal pressures and prejudices against women. Under the guise of her heroine Lucy, the author becomes both the physician and the patient suffering from a female malady of unnamed origin. This article intends to prove that, instead of narratively unravelling her creature’s past trauma with healing purposes, the author conceals its nature to protect her intimacy and she focuses on the periphery of her crisis aftermath to demonstrate its severity by means of the psychosomatic disorders that persistently haunt her life: depression, anorexia nervosa and suicidal behavior. Brontë’s literary guerrilla of secrecy aims, simultaneously, to veil and unveil the core of Lucy’s clinical case with an unequivocal diagnosis: a harmful, mysterious event from her childhood/adolescence, whose reverberations repeatedly erupt during her adulthood and endanger her survival. Unreliable but “lucid”, this heroine becomes the daguerreotype of her creator to portray life as a sad, exhausting journey, where professional self-realisation - not love or marriage - turns into the ultimate recovery therapy from past ordeals, never successfully confirmed in the case of Lucy, who epitomises a paradigm of femininity in Victorian England: the impoverished, solitary, middle-class womanhttps://doi.org/10.1515/pjes-2015-0002bodymindwomantraumasequelaeanorexiasuiciderecovery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cortés Vieco Francisco José
spellingShingle Cortés Vieco Francisco José
Unravelling the Body/Mind Reverberations of Secrets Woven into Charlotte Brontë’s Villette
Prague Journal of English Studies
body
mind
woman
trauma
sequelae
anorexia
suicide
recovery
author_facet Cortés Vieco Francisco José
author_sort Cortés Vieco Francisco José
title Unravelling the Body/Mind Reverberations of Secrets Woven into Charlotte Brontë’s Villette
title_short Unravelling the Body/Mind Reverberations of Secrets Woven into Charlotte Brontë’s Villette
title_full Unravelling the Body/Mind Reverberations of Secrets Woven into Charlotte Brontë’s Villette
title_fullStr Unravelling the Body/Mind Reverberations of Secrets Woven into Charlotte Brontë’s Villette
title_full_unstemmed Unravelling the Body/Mind Reverberations of Secrets Woven into Charlotte Brontë’s Villette
title_sort unravelling the body/mind reverberations of secrets woven into charlotte brontë’s villette
publisher Sciendo
series Prague Journal of English Studies
issn 2336-2685
publishDate 2015-07-01
description The pervasive psychological realism of Charlotte Brontë’s Villette (1853) challenges scholarly assumptions based on her biography or her indoctrination to Victorian medical discourses, as it explores dysfunctional body/mind interrelations, particularly those evidencing patriarchal pressures and prejudices against women. Under the guise of her heroine Lucy, the author becomes both the physician and the patient suffering from a female malady of unnamed origin. This article intends to prove that, instead of narratively unravelling her creature’s past trauma with healing purposes, the author conceals its nature to protect her intimacy and she focuses on the periphery of her crisis aftermath to demonstrate its severity by means of the psychosomatic disorders that persistently haunt her life: depression, anorexia nervosa and suicidal behavior. Brontë’s literary guerrilla of secrecy aims, simultaneously, to veil and unveil the core of Lucy’s clinical case with an unequivocal diagnosis: a harmful, mysterious event from her childhood/adolescence, whose reverberations repeatedly erupt during her adulthood and endanger her survival. Unreliable but “lucid”, this heroine becomes the daguerreotype of her creator to portray life as a sad, exhausting journey, where professional self-realisation - not love or marriage - turns into the ultimate recovery therapy from past ordeals, never successfully confirmed in the case of Lucy, who epitomises a paradigm of femininity in Victorian England: the impoverished, solitary, middle-class woman
topic body
mind
woman
trauma
sequelae
anorexia
suicide
recovery
url https://doi.org/10.1515/pjes-2015-0002
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