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논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
김소연 (명지대학교)
저널정보
한국영어영문학회 영어영문학 영어영문학 제68권 제2호
발행연도
2022.6
수록면
233 - 258 (26page)

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In Sylvia’s Lovers (1863), a novel that is set in a fictional eighteenth-century seaside town on the Yorkshire coast, Elizabeth Gaskell positions herself in relation to both the expanding nation and to the people of the past as a Victorian female writer. The fictional eighteenth-century Yorkshire town itself creates a historical and spatial distance both for Gaskell and for her readers, and to close the distance between her and the specific time/place/people she visualizes, Gaskell utilizes ‘telescopic eyes’ in the novel. She projects her own position as a nineteenth-century middle-class woman onto Sylvia Robson’s character. Even though she never lives off the seashore, Sylvia becomes connected to other people and to the distant world when she frames and ‘zooms in’ on individual objects or people with the seascape as the background. She is not the only one who adopts the telescopic eyes, but Philip Hepburn, her cousin and later her husband, also zooms in on his rival at certain moments. His use of the telescopic eyes reminds us of the history of national expansion in which numerous mobile subjects got lost beyond the horizon. By connecting the spectator with the objects of gaze, the telescopic eyes evoke the issues of distance, (im)mobility, and connectedness. That the spectator figures eventually zoom out of the frame in the novel suggests that immersion and binding shall not last forever, though. In spite of their temporary nature, such moments help to raise the possibility of connectedness across geographical/historical distance in Sylvia’s Lovers.

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