Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/9123
Titolo: «He calls himself a man»: Gentlemanly Politeness and the Crisis of Masculinity in Wilkie Collins's Basil
Autore: Sarnelli, Debora A.
Parole chiave: Victorian masculinities;Gentlemanly politeness;Economic man;Wilkie Collins;Sensation fiction
Data: 2025
Editore: Roma: Carocci
Citazione: Sarnelli, Debora A. ''«He calls himself a man»: Gentlemanly Politeness and the Crisis of Masculinity in Wilkie Collins’s Basil''. «Testi e linguaggi» 19, (2025): 217-232. [Studi monografici. Narrazioni del trauma]
Abstract: Acknowledging previous research on the novel and drawing upon the social history of Victorian masculinities by John Tosh, I argue that Basil (1852), Wilkie Collins’s first venture into the sensation genre, offers an insight into a specific socio-cultural moment in the history of Victorian masculinities, when the changing British social scenario together with the expansion of the middle class onto the commercial and political stage triggered a clear crisis of an aristocratic masculinity defined in terms of «gentlemanly politeness» (Tosh, 2002). This paper’s grounding in Masculinities Studies is informed by Herbert Sussman’s investigations on Victorian manhood as a highly variegated terrain strictly interwoven with cultural beliefs. Therefore, I employ Sussman’s examination of Victorian middle-class masculinities as a fundamental category of analysis to argue that the novel offers a comparison between two opposing «styles of Victorian masculinity» (Adams, 1995) in the characters of Basil, the novel’s anti-hero, and Mr Sherwin, his father-in-law. Whereas the latter is consistent with Sussman’s definition of the middle-class economic man, Basil personifies an exclusive male aristocratic culture that is threatened by the new market forces. Analysed within a wider historical and socio-cultural context, I argue that Basil’s deficiencies are emblematic of the growing crisis of gentlemanly politeness and its struggle to adapt outdated lifestyles to modern realities.
URI: http://dx.doi.org/10.57571/118837
http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/9123
ISBN: 978-88-29-02899-3
ISSN: 1974-2886
È visualizzato nelle collezioni:Testi e linguaggi. Volume 19 (2025)

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