ABSTRACT

Popular novelist, female aesthete, Victorian radical and proto-modernist, Lucas Malet (Mary St. Leger  Harrison, 1852-1931) was one of the most successful writers of her day, yet few of her remarkable novels remain in print. Malet was a daughter of the ‘broad church’ priest and well-known Victorian author Charles Kingsley; her sister Rose, uncle, Henry Kingsley and her cousin Mary Henrietta Kingsley were also published authors. Malet was part of a creative dynasty from which she drew inspiration but against which she rebelled both in her personal life and her published work. This collection brings together for the first time a selection of scholarly essays on Malet’s life and writing, foregrounding her contributions to nineteenth- and twentieth-century discourses surrounding disability, psychology, religion, sexuality, the New Woman, and decadent, aesthetic and modernist cultural movements. The essays contained in this volume explore Malet’s authorial experience—from both within the mainstream of the British literary tradition and, curiously, from outside it—supplementing and nuancing current debates about fin-de-siècle women’s writing. The collection asks the question ‘who was Lucas Malet?’ and ‘how—despite its popularity—did her courageous, unique and fascinating writing disappear from view for so long?’

chapter |30 pages

Reading Malet “through the eyelashes”

An Introduction to Her Life and Work

part 1|1 pages

Maletian Bodies

chapter 1|19 pages

Hysterical Bodies and Gothic Spaces

Lucas Malet’s “moral dissecting-room”

chapter 2|17 pages

“[T]hat very ugly saddle”

Disability, Adaptation, and Paternal Inheritance in The History of Sir Richard Calmady

chapter 3|17 pages

“Vanity of vanities”

The Bildungsroman, Corporeal Fragility, and the Aesthetic Ideal in The Far Horizon

part 2|1 pages

Dissident Women

chapter 4|20 pages

Mad Dogs and English (New) Women

Grotesque Gender in The Carissima

chapter 6|18 pages

The Authorial Ambition of Deadham Hard

Reimagining Womanhood, Profession, and Desire

part 3|1 pages

Malet and Her Contemporaries

chapter 7|18 pages

Reorienting the Bildungsroman

Progress Narratives, Queerness, and Disability in The History of Sir Richard Calmady and Jude the Obscure

chapter 8|18 pages

Some Chapter of Some Other Story

Henry James, Lucas Malet, and the Real Past of The Sense of the Past

part 4|1 pages

Catholic (Proto-)Modernism

chapter 9|19 pages

Against the English Nation

The Ideological Proto-Modernism of The Far Horizon

chapter 10|16 pages

“[U]ndecode-able wireless signals”

Telepathy and Contamination in The Survivors