Strategie del patetico e interludi circensi in Hide and Seek di Wilkie Collins
Abstract
Starting from Victor Turner’s definitions of cultural performance and liminoid phenomena,
the essay aims to analyse Wilkie Collins’s third novel, Hide and Seek (1854),
which seems to be a sort of survey of the pastimes Victorian England allowed itself in
the age of the increasing commodification of leisure. Though not a proper sensation
novel (the genre for which Collins became famous in the 1860s), Hide and Seek draws
on the conventions of melodrama, which, as Peter Brook convincingly argues, exerted
a powerful influence on 19th century fiction. And, after the fashion of the melodrama,
it deals with the disclosure of the secret origins of Mary Grice, a deaf and dumb little
girl who performs in Jubber’s circus. However, although Hide and Seek is charged
with sentimentality and patheticism, Collins appears to borrow from the circus and the
music hall, in order to give his work the light touch of comedy. In fact, he scatters his
novel with a number of “scenes in the circle”, which prove reflexive in Turner’s sense.
Contained in the overarching pattern of the plot, they provide a diversion from the
story’s main line, establishing an unusual kernel/satellite narrative dynamics, where
the carnivalesque hinders and delays the unravelling of the mystery, defying the “bourgeois”
narrative logic.