Towards a Wise Despotism: Traces of Thomas Carlyle in the BBC <i>North and South</i> (2004)

Thomas Carlyle was among the most influential writers in the English language during the 19th century, but is now ostensibly absent from cultural memory. Nevertheless, his ideas may be seen to live on indirectly in the works of the writers he influenced, one of whom is Elizabeth Gaskell. The 2004 ad...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mark Wallace
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Cagliari 2012-12-01
Series:Between
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.unica.it/index.php/between/article/view/474
Description
Summary:Thomas Carlyle was among the most influential writers in the English language during the 19th century, but is now ostensibly absent from cultural memory. Nevertheless, his ideas may be seen to live on indirectly in the works of the writers he influenced, one of whom is Elizabeth Gaskell. The 2004 adaptation of Gaskell’s North and South provides an instance of a modern approach to Carlylean ideas embodied in the source text. The adaptation finds itself in dialogue with Carlylean notions of heroism and leadership, modifying these notions for acceptance with a 21st century audience. The treatment of the Carlylean content of Gaskell’s novel is both revealing of socio-political ideals latent in modern audiences and a demonstration of the transmission and transmutation of ideologies through narrative and across media.
ISSN:2039-6597