ABSTRACT

Sensational Deviance: Disability in Nineteenth-Century Sensation Fiction investigates the representation of disability in fictional works by the leading Victorian sensation novelists Wilkie Collins and Mary Elizabeth Braddon, exploring how disability acts as a major element in the shaping of the sensation novel genre and how various sensation novels respond to traditional viewpoints of disability and to new developments in physiological and psychiatric knowledge. The depictions of disabled characters in sensation fiction frequently deviate strongly from typical depictions of disability in mainstream Victorian literature, undermining its stigmatized positioning as tragic deficit, severe limitation, or pathology.

Close readings of nine individual novels situate their investigations of physical, sensory, and cognitive disabilities against the period’s disability discourses and interest in senses, perception, stimuli, the nervous system, and the hereditability of impairments. The importance of moral insanity and degeneration theory within sensation fiction connect the genre with criminal anthropology, suggesting the genre’s further significance in the light of the later emergence of eugenics, psychoanalysis, and genetics.

 

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

part I|133 pages

Wilkie Collins and Disabled Identities

chapter 1|33 pages

Hide and Seek (1854)

chapter 2|31 pages

The Dead Secret (1857)

chapter 3|27 pages

Poor Miss Finch (1871–2)

chapter 4|41 pages

The Law and the Lady (1875)

part II|84 pages

Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Disabled Identities