期刊论文详细信息
Humanities
Young Adult Crisis Heterotopias and Feminist Revisions in Colleen Gleason’s Stoker and Holmes Series
Sara K. Day1  Sonya Sawyer Fritz2 
[1] Department of English and Linguistics, Truman State University, Kirksville, MO 63501, USA;Department of English, University of Central Arkansas, Arkansas, AR 72034, USA;
关键词: neo-Victorian fiction;    young adult fiction;    Colleen Gleason;    Michel Foucault;    crisis heterotopias;    steampunk;   
DOI  :  10.3390/h11010016
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

In this article, we investigate neo-Victorian YA fiction’s efforts to mirror twenty-first-century feminist ideals in nineteenth-century spaces through examining the role of heterotopia in Colleen Gleason’s Stoker and Holmes series (2013–2019). We first consider how the novels’ steampunk elements figure in Gleason’s feminist framing of neo-Victorian London, particularly in terms of common heterotopias—primarily the garden and the museum—that the protagonists briefly navigate over the course of the series. Second, we explore how the series’ three female protagonists each occupy spaces that function as pseudo—“heterotopias of crisis”—that is, while each of them claims space within which to subvert expectations of women, these spaces and the activities they support are themselves fundamentally insular and yield no socio-cultural critique. Finally, we consider how the spaces created and occupied by the books’ villain, known as the Ankh, serve as heterotopias. We find that the fact that the only truly heterotopic spaces in the novels belong to the villain, whose transgressive deviance the series frames as a bridge too far, illustrates how disappointingly limited neo-Victorian YA can be in its ability to offer subversive mirrors to twenty-first-century feminism.

【 授权许可】

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