Thesis ID: CBB001567273

Sleep and Sleeplessness in the Victorian Novel, Jane Eyre to Dracula (2011)

unapi

Strovas, Karen Beth (Author)


Claremont Graduate University
Zigarovich, Jolene
Zigarovich, Jolene
Bhattacharya, Sumangala
Greene, Gayle
The Claremont Graduate University
Redfield, Marc
Bhattacharya, Sumangala
Greene, Gayle
Publication date: 2011
Language: English


Publication Date: 2011
Edition Details: Advisor: Redfield, Marc; Committee Members: Zigarovich, Jolene, Bhattacharya, Sumangala, Greene, Gayle.
Physical Details: 243 pp.

Victorian inquisitiveness about sleep and dysfunctions of sleep is exemplified in novels published during the fifty-year period from Jane Eyre (1847) to Dracula (1897). This inquisitiveness foreshadows modern medical sleep science and immerses the reading public in a body of popular literature that subverts the concept of "normal" sleep. My dissertation explores the ways in which Victorian fiction brings physiological and psychological female concerns to the fore through the plot devices of sleep and sleeplessness. I examine the Victorians' diverse interpretations of illness, physical and sexual vulnerability, moral insanity, criminality, and anxiety to determine the thematic and narratological ways in which these issues are linked to sleeping and waking states. Drawing on feminist literary criticism, cultural historicism, and medical insight from the early nineteenth-century to the present, I argue that Charlotte Brontë, Wilkie Collins, and Bram Stoker use sleep and wakefulness as vehicles to navigate gendered fluctuations of power and loss. Jane Eyre , The Woman in White , and Dracula each present sleep as a gendered space in which power is contested. I argue that sleeplessness and restlessness are the methods women adopt, either on purpose or unintentionally, to realize self-sufficiency and protect themselves from patriarchal jurisdiction and other social restrictions on women. Women must reject their instinctual desires for a certain amount of sleep so that they can maintain agency and authority over their bodies and narratives. Implicit in the novels is the idea that deep sleep is a mechanism for achieving health and moral strength of character. However, explicitly and without apology, the novels use the trope of sleep for women as a violent instrument of loss, infection, powerlessness, and weakness. The cultural and medical artifacts of the time suggest that deep, indulgent sleep is the only way to achieve or maintain health. Yet Victorian authors write sleep as a sure road to incapacitation and subjugation. Brontë, Collins, and Stoker demonstrate that a woman's mind is only as healthy as her sleep, while her body is always safer awake.

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Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 73/04, Oct 2012. Proquest Document ID: 915146799.


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Authors & Contributors
Bernabeu-Mestre, Jospe
Bonner, Kieran
Cid Santos, A. P.
Esplugues Pellicier, Josep Xavier
Galiana-Sánchez, M. Eugenia
Glendening, John
Journals
History of Psychiatry
History of the Human Sciences
Asclepio: Archivo Iberoamericano de Historia de la Medicina
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History/Bulletin Canadienne d'Histoire de la Medecine
Intellectual History Review
Journal of Literature and Science
Publishers
University of Washington
Ashgate
Palgrave Macmillan
Rodopi
University of Notre Dame
Concepts
Science and literature
Mental disorders and diseases
Medicine
Sexuality
Psychology
Health
People
Collins, Wilkie
Brontë, Charlotte
Hardy, Thomas
Wells, Herbert George
Conrad, Joseph
Dickens, Charles
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
18th century
21st century
Modern
Places
Great Britain
France
Spain
United States
Institutions
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)
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