Return to search

Domestic Ruins: Imagining the Nunnery in Eighteenth-Century British Literature

<p> The Catholic nun and nunnery participate in the formation of eighteenth-century
gender and national identities. Not only do nuns and nunneries appear in
literary works from the Restoration to the Regency period and beyond, they also
act as sites upon which major aesthetic, political, cultural and material theories of
identity work themselves out in the eighteenth century. This dissertation argues
that the antiquarian, literary, and aesthetic understanding of nunneries in the long
eighteenth century had everything to do with imagining ideal domestic femininity,
and at the same time disavowing that imagination. </p> <p> I begin with an analysis of the post-Reformation antiquarian treatment of medieval English nunneries, and then apply that analysis to three sites of literary
imagination: Alexander Pope's "Eloisa to Abelard" (1717), Sophia Lee's The
Recess (1783-5), and the gothic novels of Ann Radcliffe (1790-97). I also pair my
analyses of these texts with cultural, political, and material contexts such as
antiquary John Brand's treatment of Godstow Nunnery, William Beckford's
architectural folly Fonthill Abbey, accounts of French emigres during the
Revolution, the anti-Catholic Gordon Riots, and images of monastic ruins and
wax bodies. </p> <p> With these varied contexts in mind, I come to the conclusion that the
repression of Roman Catholic identity involves a very specific re-imagining of the
nunnery and the nun's body within it; this re-imagination narrates Protestant
domestic identity onto the site of female monastic ruins in order to re-signify such
mutable sites as fixed symbols of virtuous femininity and maternity. I conclude
with a look at how this construction of ideal femininity figures in Jane Austen's
Northanger Abbey (1798) and Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Lady Audley 's Secret
(1861-62), as they both take as their setting a convent-turned-country house. The
popular consumption of poetry, antiquarian history and art, novels, and consumer
goods converge in my conclusion to show how concerns with a lack of distinction
between the public and private are also about a lack of distinction between the
ideal and subversive woman, as she is a version of there-imagined Catholic nun. </p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/19182
Date02 1900
CreatorsKerfoot, Alicia
ContributorsWalmsley, Peter, English and Cultural Studies
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish

Page generated in 0.0057 seconds