The perfect gentleman : the representation of men in the English Gothic novel, 1762-1820

This thesis examines the representation of male character stereotypes as manifestations of a formula in late eighteenth-century popular fiction. In order to establish the presence of the formula, I have inspected a wide spectrum of both familiar and lesser-known works. Much recent criticism has focu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Behr, Kate E.
Published: University of Oxford 1993
Subjects:
800
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.356964
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-356964
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-3569642018-02-06T03:13:09ZThe perfect gentleman : the representation of men in the English Gothic novel, 1762-1820Behr, Kate E.1993This thesis examines the representation of male character stereotypes as manifestations of a formula in late eighteenth-century popular fiction. In order to establish the presence of the formula, I have inspected a wide spectrum of both familiar and lesser-known works. Much recent criticism has focused on the passive figure of the heroine as one expression of female anxiety within the texts. In contrast, this thesis draws attention to the critically unseen, active figures surrounding her threatened perfection, by establishing, first, a common representation or role within the formula for each stock character and, second, the source and possible effect of these stereotypes. In Chapters One and Two, the parameters for this approach are set up and the influences of other genres on characterization in the Gothic romance are considered. Chapter Three establishes the eighteenth-century ideal of masculinity through an investigation of contemporary conduct literature. These standards are then applied to stock male figures in succeeding chapters. Chapters Four, Five and Six consider the primary male figures of hero, father and villain, revealing that the ideal of masculine perfection affects all these stereotypes. The nature of heroism is questioned in the person of the hero; the father - an exemplum of gentlemanly perfection - is made absent within the text; and the villain reinforces this ideal by perverting it. Chapter Seven considers the representation of the victim figure and the way in which the stereotype of masculinity indirectly victimizes male figures. In Chapter Eight, three groups of secondary male characters are considered and their relationship to the primary male characters examined. This analysis of male stereotypes has, therefore, provided one approach to an understanding of Gothic conventions.800LiteratureUniversity of Oxfordhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.356964https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:57c69640-90ab-4b4e-87a9-5f0c42e649f0Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 800
Literature
spellingShingle 800
Literature
Behr, Kate E.
The perfect gentleman : the representation of men in the English Gothic novel, 1762-1820
description This thesis examines the representation of male character stereotypes as manifestations of a formula in late eighteenth-century popular fiction. In order to establish the presence of the formula, I have inspected a wide spectrum of both familiar and lesser-known works. Much recent criticism has focused on the passive figure of the heroine as one expression of female anxiety within the texts. In contrast, this thesis draws attention to the critically unseen, active figures surrounding her threatened perfection, by establishing, first, a common representation or role within the formula for each stock character and, second, the source and possible effect of these stereotypes. In Chapters One and Two, the parameters for this approach are set up and the influences of other genres on characterization in the Gothic romance are considered. Chapter Three establishes the eighteenth-century ideal of masculinity through an investigation of contemporary conduct literature. These standards are then applied to stock male figures in succeeding chapters. Chapters Four, Five and Six consider the primary male figures of hero, father and villain, revealing that the ideal of masculine perfection affects all these stereotypes. The nature of heroism is questioned in the person of the hero; the father - an exemplum of gentlemanly perfection - is made absent within the text; and the villain reinforces this ideal by perverting it. Chapter Seven considers the representation of the victim figure and the way in which the stereotype of masculinity indirectly victimizes male figures. In Chapter Eight, three groups of secondary male characters are considered and their relationship to the primary male characters examined. This analysis of male stereotypes has, therefore, provided one approach to an understanding of Gothic conventions.
author Behr, Kate E.
author_facet Behr, Kate E.
author_sort Behr, Kate E.
title The perfect gentleman : the representation of men in the English Gothic novel, 1762-1820
title_short The perfect gentleman : the representation of men in the English Gothic novel, 1762-1820
title_full The perfect gentleman : the representation of men in the English Gothic novel, 1762-1820
title_fullStr The perfect gentleman : the representation of men in the English Gothic novel, 1762-1820
title_full_unstemmed The perfect gentleman : the representation of men in the English Gothic novel, 1762-1820
title_sort perfect gentleman : the representation of men in the english gothic novel, 1762-1820
publisher University of Oxford
publishDate 1993
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.356964
work_keys_str_mv AT behrkatee theperfectgentlemantherepresentationofmenintheenglishgothicnovel17621820
AT behrkatee perfectgentlemantherepresentationofmenintheenglishgothicnovel17621820
_version_ 1718613522293719040