SPECTRAL NARRATION AND THE HOUSES OF DESIRE IN CHARLOTTE BRONTE'S VILLETTE
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Date
2017
Authors
Ahmet Suner
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
WEST CHESTER UNIV
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Abstract
The narrative complexities of Villette derive from the positing of Lucy as a ghost that hovers between absence and presence interiority and exteriority private and public. The claim that Lucy is a ghost projects a somewhat different light on the novel which may then be viewed as the spectral narration of a spectral quest for a spectral identity and this insistent aspect of spectrality which is frequently encountered in the novel's resourceful use of gothic elements must be thought to problematize any notion of narration quest or identity that grounds itself on presence. Being uprooted from her native environment in which she seems hardly ever to have taken root Lucy often seems to stick vehemently to her Protestantism defending it against the incursions of the Catholic environment in which she lives and works. But this is ultimately a surface opposition which has more to do with the public performance of identity and which is largely at odds with the much more fluid field of identity determined by processes of varying and unstable identifications and speculations in which Lucy enters as a speculating and spying ghost. What underlies the surface opposition between Catholicism and Protestantism are the various desires and fears that Lucy experiences in the project of finding a home for her own ghostly self. Therefore the question of Lucy's national or religious identity in Villette must be understood as her ghostly quest to find an adequate home or haunt.
Description
Keywords
BRONTE CHARLOTTE, SURVEILLANCE, 'VILLETTE'
Fields of Science
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WoS Q
Scopus Q
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Volume
44
Issue
3
Start Page
315
End Page
+
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Web of Science™ Citations
3
checked on Apr 09, 2026
