Research Article

Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis

Volume: 30 Number: 2 December 23, 2020
  • Ayşe Çelikkol *
EN

Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis

Abstract

The so-called animal turn in the humanities has given rise to an increased interest in the ways in which representations of animals shape human cultures. In Victorian studies, scholars have attended to the significance of domestic pets and other animals in the production of Victorian ideologies and subjectivities. Recent studies often point out the role animals played in the formation of Victorian domesticity. While these studies in general assign a key role to animal figures in the mediation of traditional domesticity, this essay explores the opposite phenomenon taking place in the Victorian novelist Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis, a novella in which pets and farm animals are prominent. In this work, the eponymous protagonist, a young woman living on a farm, falls in love with a cosmopolitan engineer. Rather than portraying Phillis as an ethereal angelic creature who would be typical of the ideal Victorian woman, Gaskell ascribes to her a passionate nature, though hidden behind a constrained façade. Phillis is partly able to express her deep-set emotions, including her interest in the cosmopolitan engineer, when interacting with animals. This non-traditional gender role becomes possible through the representation of birds and the family dog. Animals enable the imagination of a femininity that resists restrictive gender codes. The traditional association of animals with women has sometimes worked to denigrate the latter, but as Gaskell shows that this link also has an emancipatory potential.

Keywords

References

  1. Derrida, J. (2008). The Animal That Therefore I Am. New York: Fordham University Press.
  2. Gaskell, E. (1857). The Life of Charlotte Brontë, Vol 1, London: Smith, Elder, and Co.
  3. ---. (1986). Cranford/Cousin Phillis. London: Penguin Books. ---. (2008). North and South. New York: Oxford University Press.
  4. ---. (2008). Wives and Daughters. New York: Oxford University Press.
  5. Ayers, B, (2018). Gaskell’s Activism and Animal Agency. In Ayers (Ed.), Victorians and Their Animals: Beast on a Leash (pp. 23-44). London: Routledge.
  6. Birke, L. & Parisi, L. (1999). Animals, Becoming. In P. Steeves (Ed), Animal Others: Ethics, Ontology, and Animal Life (pp. 55-73). Albany: State University of New York Press.
  7. Brown, P. L. (1992). The Pastoral and Anti-Pastoral in Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis. The Victorian Newsletter 82, pp. 22-5.
  8. Curtis, J. (1995). Manning the World: The Role of the Male Narrator in Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis. Victorian Review,21(2), pp. 128-44.

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Creative Arts and Writing

Journal Section

Research Article

Authors

Ayşe Çelikkol * This is me
0000-0003-3677-7308
Türkiye

Publication Date

December 23, 2020

Submission Date

July 12, 2020

Acceptance Date

October 8, 2020

Published in Issue

Year 2020 Volume: 30 Number: 2

APA
Çelikkol, A. (2020). Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis. Litera: Journal of Language, Literature and Culture Studies, 30(2), 307-324. https://doi.org/10.26650/LITERA2020-0102
AMA
1.Çelikkol A. Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis. Litera. 2020;30(2):307-324. doi:10.26650/LITERA2020-0102
Chicago
Çelikkol, Ayşe. 2020. “Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis”. Litera: Journal of Language, Literature and Culture Studies 30 (2): 307-24. https://doi.org/10.26650/LITERA2020-0102.
EndNote
Çelikkol A (December 1, 2020) Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis. Litera: Journal of Language, Literature and Culture Studies 30 2 307–324.
IEEE
[1]A. Çelikkol, “Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis”, Litera, vol. 30, no. 2, pp. 307–324, Dec. 2020, doi: 10.26650/LITERA2020-0102.
ISNAD
Çelikkol, Ayşe. “Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis”. Litera: Journal of Language, Literature and Culture Studies 30/2 (December 1, 2020): 307-324. https://doi.org/10.26650/LITERA2020-0102.
JAMA
1.Çelikkol A. Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis. Litera. 2020;30:307–324.
MLA
Çelikkol, Ayşe. “Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis”. Litera: Journal of Language, Literature and Culture Studies, vol. 30, no. 2, Dec. 2020, pp. 307-24, doi:10.26650/LITERA2020-0102.
Vancouver
1.Ayşe Çelikkol. Gender, Animals, and Gaskell’s Cousin Phillis. Litera. 2020 Dec. 1;30(2):307-24. doi:10.26650/LITERA2020-0102