Title | Szanter, Ashley_MENG_2015 |
Alternative Title | High Victorian Monster Fiction and its Subversions of Taxonomies of Deformity, Disease, and Crime |
Creator | Szanter, Ashley |
Collection Name | Master of English |
Description | "Scholarly examinations of Victorian literature do not neglect the commanding presence of monsters. Nineteenth-century texts often categorize 'monstrousness' as inextricable with being alive--be it human or otherwise. But the nature of monstrosity is often culturally determined. Victorians are expressing their understanding of monstrosity by attending to outward appearances and actions of an individual. The rise of fictions about monsters suggests an anxiety that those around them could hide aspects of their person from public view. ... [Building off the work of scholars in this context, I] examine why people create, fear, and seek to conquer monsters. Additionally, ... why the Victorians developed a culture that fed off of monster fiction and how it appealed to them by drawing from cultural experiences. As a result of scientific advancements, the Victorians developed taxonomic systems that aided them in classifying monsters. These systems reveal fears about monsters, otherness, and victimization." |
Subject | Monsters; Anxiety; British literature |
Keywords | Victimization; Foreignness; Criminality; Victorian culture; Otherness (Philosophy) |
Digital Publisher | Stewart Library, Weber State University |
Date | 2015 |
Language | eng |
Rights | The author has granted Weber State University Archives a limited, non-exclusive, royalty-free license to reproduce their theses, in whole or in part, in electronic or paper form and to make it available to the general public at no charge. The author retains all other rights. |
Source | University Archives Electronic Records; Master of Arts in English. Stewart Library, Weber State University |
OCR Text | Show Szanter 2 Chapter 1 : Introduction Scholarly examinations of Victorian literature do not neglect the commanding presence of monsters. Nineteenthcentury texts often categorize “monstrousness” as inextricable with being alive–be it human or otherwise. But the nature of monstrosity is often culturally determined. Victorians are expressing their understanding of monstrosity by attending to outward appearances and actions of an individual. The rise of fictions about monsters suggests an anxiety that those around them could hide aspects of their person from public view. Victorian texts placed heavy stock in anything that could act as an outward indicator of personal character, such as behavior or dress. This dependence on appearances nurtured a dislike for anything not immediately recognizable. This discomfort inspires the idea that morality and the body were intertwined. In Monster Theory (1996), Jeffrey Jerome Cohen discusses the fundamental role of monsters as an element of human creation and experience. His introductory chapter, “Monster Culture (Seven Theses)” argues that are seven themes present in crosscultural monster stories: “The Monster’s Body is a Cultural Body”; “The Monster Always Escapes”; “The Monster is the Harbinger of Category Crisis”; “The Monster Dwells at the Gates of Difference”; “The Monster Polices the Borders of the Possible”; “Fear of the Monster is Really a Kind of Desire”; and “The Monster Stands at the Threshold . . . of Becoming.” Cohen’s chapter examines patterns in monster fictions, and what they represent about human nature. The monster is the mythological placeholder of human fear, anxiety, desire, and experience. It is how humans categorize what they do not or choose not to understand. Falling under these organizing theses, Cohen covers everything from natural disasters to disease, foreign invasion, deviant sexualities, the duality of Szanter 3 man, and the reigning principle of monstrosity: otherness. His chapter examines how monsters are dealt with, created, and conquered. Succeeding Cohen’s work is Richard Kearney’s Strangers, Gods and Monsters: Interpreting Otherness (2003). While not as comprehensive as Cohen’s analyses, Kearney takes Cohen’s assertion that, “The Monster Dwells at the Gates of Difference,” and expands upon it by examining how monstrousness — whether divine or foreign — always boils down to humans’ fear of the “Other.” Kearney interprets “Others” as “deep down, tokens of fracture within the human psyche. They speak to us of how we are split between conscious and unconscious, familiar and unfamiliar, same and other” (5). Tapping into the duality of man pattern, Kearney’s “Others” always represent that which is unrecognizable and, therefore, feared. If otherness equals fear, monsters must embody some sense of otherness because we fear them. However, Kearney does not only assert that monsters fit into their category but strangers and gods as well. In a sense, his analysis expands to include other fundamentals of the human experience such as fear of the foreigner and faith systems. For Kearney, fear is a central tenet of religion, so gods are the monsters of religion because their divine otherness marks them as something different and fearful. But he more closely attaches himself to Cohen’s arguments by including the stranger as a monster. His otherness lies in difference — just as the foreignness of the monster lies in difference. Rudolf Wittkower relies on this association of foreignness in “Marvels of the East: A Study in the History of Monsters” (1942). Taking a distinctly nonWestern approach to the study of monsters, Wittkower asserts that the Greeks (the forefathers of Western monster culture) invented monsters based on geography rather than psychological fear. As the Greeks pushed to the East, they invented monsters to represent geographic phenomena, cultural differences, and Szanter 4 religions they did not understand. The end result was a proliferation of mythological “monster races and animals which they imagined to live at a great distance in the East” (1). Travelers and warriors took these stories back to their homeland and used them to describe those things that were too foreign to fully accept. The use of monsters as a placeholder for otherness is much more culturally embedded than modern people might realize Using fear of foreignness and otherness, Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy’s Rabid: A Cultural History of the World’s Most Diabolical Virus (2012) provides an historical overview of monstrosity as a result of disease and contagion. Using the rabies virus as a foundation, Wasik and Murphy trace the development of monster mythologies from Ancient Greece and Rome through the Early Modern period and into the present day. They show that many monster legends seem to have a uniting feature: symptoms of the rabies virus. Whether they are analyzing vampires or werewolves, all monsters exhibit certain behaviors that can be traced to humans infected with rabies. The tendency towards biting humans, exhibiting animalistic behaviors, increasingly dehumanized physicality, and wildness are all common symptoms of the rabies sufferer. For cultures before the development of modern medicine, these behaviors were distinctly monstrous and were assimilated into existing monsters such as vampires, werewolves, and demons. Their chapter, “King Louis,” deals entirely with nineteenthcentury conceptions of rabies and monstrosity naming Louis Pasteur as the man who “remade mankind’s understanding of rabies” through his landmark rabies vaccine (151). They analyze the 19 th century sensationalizing of rabies as a contagion infecting the population and transforming them into animals. The fear of becoming “Other” manifested itself in horror fiction, penny dreadfuls, and folk tales of the time. Szanter 5 This cultural obsession with death and macabre is Judith Flanders’s central concern in The Invention of Murder: How the Victorians Revelled in Death and Detection and Created Modern Crime (2011). An historical and cultural overview, Flanders exposes the Victorian age as a culture who espoused cleanliness and virtue but held a strong fascination for blood and death. Flanders aims to expose “how this desire was transformed over the nineteenth century” as well as how it “transformed that century” (19). Flanders claims that the Victorians viewed murder and bloody spectacle as “aesthetic,” “art,” and “theatre” (18). This fascination with violent crime can also be seen in late Victorian monster fiction. In her chapter, “Modernity,” she references Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde , Dracula, and The Picture of Dorian Gray as capitalizing on the mainstream popularity of fiction that showcases violence and criminality. While not referencing the monsters’ “otherness” specifically, she draws preliminary connections between their criminal activity and concurrent popularized criminals, such as Jack the Ripper. Flanders’s analyses of Victorian culture as hidden and repressed are influenced by Michel Foucault’s The History of Sexuality, Volume 1: An Introduction (1978). In his opening chapter, he draws clear connections between American culture and Victorian Britain. One of the most profound connections is his aim “to examine the case of a society which has been loudly castigating itself for its hypocrisy for more than a century, which speak verbosely of its own silence, takes great pains to relate in detail the things it does not say, denounces the powers it exercises, and promises to liberate itself from the very laws that have made it function” (8). Of particular interest to this discipline is his assertion that these two cultures “speak verbosely of [their] own silence” implying that they discussed topics deemed taboo for polite conversation in Szanter 6 other, less obvious, ways. These subliminal discussions expose what people are not willing to address outright and thereby exposes a fear, or anxiety, that deserves attention. These gaps are where I intend to place my analysis. All of these texts examine why people create, fear, and seek to conquer monsters. Additionally, many of these also address why the Victorians developed a culture that fed off of monster fiction and how it appealed to them by drawing from cultural experiences. As a result of scientific advancements, the Victorians developed taxonomic systems that aided them in classifying monsters. These systems reveal fears about monsters, otherness, and victimization. We see the Victorians exploring these fears in myriad ways. Texts like Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Dracula , and The Picture of Dorian Gray address fears, and complications, about the effectiveness of taxonomies for monsters and monstrosity. But, as is often the case, those fears are of a joined biological and sociological nature. The fear of “otherness” manifested in the infamous behaviors of Victorian audiences who abhorred foreigners and immigrants but held endless fascination for freaks and monsters. I will argue that high Victorian monster fiction created unrecognizable others who subverted existing taxonomies for deformity, disease, and criminality. Victorian society marked the high point for pseudosciences that aimed to explain human monstrosity. My second chapter, “Monstrosity and Deformity,” will examine phrenology and physiognomy. These were “scientific” means of approaching the culture of violence and blood that marked the nineteenth century. This culture, awash in the belief that virtue and morality were human centers, desperately wanted those who presented a threat to them to be recognizable and, subsequently, explainable. These “scientific” approaches assuaged fears about the unseen and allowed people to believe that morality was a physical, as well as spiritual, marker. If a Szanter 7 person was physically unattractive, they were immoral; if a person was beautiful then their physical form reflected their upstanding morality. This is where Victorian definitions of the monstrous live. Lacking in credibility, these pseudosciences declined in popularity by the early twentieth century but failed to take with them a cultural and medical interest in blood. Advances in medical technology allowed scientists to understand blood at the molecular level; this further illuminated the function of blood, and its undeniable importance in understanding humanity. The third chapter, “Monstrosity and Disease,” will look at monstrous representations of disease and the diseased body. Regardless of socio cultural background, blood often qualifies as the ultimate human life force. With the Victorian era’s advances in scientific technology came discoveries about the nature of blood. In particular, how blood can affect the individual when it is not “pure” or “clean.” Victorian monsters were all victims of one common enemy: their own blood. It was because of this threat of unrecognizable contagion that blood diseases preoccupied the Victorian consciousness; tainted blood meant tainted humanity. It is in this understanding of blood that we find Victorian monstrosity most clearly defined; a person with tainted blood experienced a social devolution. Their status devolves from human to subhuman and, with this demotion, comes a taxonomic system about the kinds of life they are assumed to lead. My fourth chapter, “Monstrosity and Criminality,” will examine the how monstrosity and criminality work together in Victorian monster fiction. Criminality in Victorian society was understood as a defect – the person was tainted from the very beginning of their his/her and so they are predisposed to acts of violence because his/her morality can hold him/her to no other standard. Blood, more specifically tainted blood, was the result of some divine punishment for the immoral actions, thoughts, or predispositions of a particular individual or their bloodline. Szanter 8 This stigma developed a clear criminal class. Those in the criminal class were of tainted stock and could only be expected to behave as criminals. While knowledge on the function and causes of blood disease were still developing from a medical standpoint, clear decisions were made by the populous: tainted blood was the direct result of immorality and therefore a punishment and a monstrosity. This thesis aims to expose how these texts subverted the effectiveness of monstrous taxonomies and how these subversions aided monster fiction’s rise to popularity. Szanter 9 Chapter 2 : Monstrosity and Deformity Any discussion of Western conceptions of monstrosity must examine the cultural phenomenon of the “freak show,” since, as Lisa Kochanek explains in “Reframing the Freak: From Sideshow to Science,” there is the idea “that the freak show has very little to do with the person whose deformity is exhibited. Rather, the person’s physical abnormality is the starting point for a construction of freakishness” (231). The voyeurism that defines the freak show originates in the public’s desire to connect “monstrosity,” “otherness,” and deformity. For the Victorian public, a clear link existed between physicality and that which was mentally (or spiritually) impure. For them, the freak show was both a place to seek entertainment and to amaze and warn viewers about the consequences of an impure life. Kochanek quotes Robert Bogden, who explains that freaks can be defined “not by the possession of any particular quality, but by a set of practices, a way of thinking about and presenting people with major, minor, and fabricated physical, mental, and behavioral differences” (qtd. in Kochanek 231). Under this definition, the freak’s nature was not the presence of physical deformity. Instead, the physical deformity was an outward manifestation of deviant thoughts, beliefs, or actions. This perception led Victorians to a new understanding: a person’s outward appearance was the greatest indicator of an individual’s moral character; all necessary information could be taken from the person’s dress, behavior, and appearance. Current scholarship examining the Victorian attachments to the inner and outer selves tends to focus on physiognomy and phrenology. Although texts that reference physicality as a Szanter 10 suitable template for moral character date back to Ancient Greece and Rome, the development 1 of scientific disciplines dates back to the 17 th and 18 th centuries. One such discipline was 2 phrenology, which was founded by Franz Joseph Gall, who published phrenological studies and manuscripts in his native Germany. He asserts the idea that an individual’s behaviors, tendencies, and personality are dictated by protuberances on the skull. Specific protuberances correlate to parts of the brain that Gall associated with behavioral patterns such as caution, sublimity, secretiveness, and selfesteem. The sizes and shapes of bumps represented parts of the brain that were more or less developed and would manifest in the personality accordingly. This system categorized individuals into certain classes, one of which was criminal. Like phrenology, physiognomy endeavors to connect an individual’s physical appearance to their character, often with an emphasis on facial features. The popularity of physiognomy and phrenology peaks in the late 18 th century and continues throughout the nineteenth and into the early twentieth centuries. In About Faces: Physiognomy in NineteenthCentury Britain , Sharrona Pearl attributes the popularity of these pseudosciences to the Victorian desire for the recognizable “Other.” She argues that widespread belief in the physical manifestation of morality and virtue led to a belief in a class of criminals that all conformed to a specific appearance. Both physiognomy and phrenology provided Victorians with taxonomic systems that corroborated these beliefs. Exploring these beliefs on Harvard’s library collections blog, The Shelf , Bachmann sees a pattern in all physiognomic and phrenological texts: they all include illustrations. Bachmann argues it was not enough to describe 1 Lavater and Lombroso spearheaded the development of “modern” physiognomy which originally derives from the works of Aristotle, Polemo of Laodicea, and Adamantius the Sophist. 2 Schapin and Schaffer’s The Leviathan and the Air Pump provides thorough examinations of 17thand 18thcentury scientific practices and experimentation theory. Szanter 11 the appearance of a criminal individual because the variations in “criminal” faces were highly nuanced. Each major pseudoscientific text came with a set of illustrations that allowed readers to immediately notice a stranger’s potential for violent or criminal behavior. Widely referred to as a “pocket Lavater,” the Swiss scientist’s Physiognomic Fragments for Furthering the Knowledge and Love of Man was published in a travel size copy so someone could carry around the illustrations with them wherever they went. This seeming dependence upon examples of criminal faces exposes a desire to connect one’s character and virtue with appearance. Bridget Marshall argues that it was this desire to correlate physicality with morality that influenced Victorian monster literature. Marshall’s “The Face of Evil: Physiognomy, Phrenology, and the Gothic Villain” examines how Victorian authors used physiognomy and phrenology to design monsters who both adhered to and challenged these pseudoscientific classifications. While these analyses consistently discuss how and why phrenology and physiognomy were popular science, they fail to address how deeply Victorian people relied on these. The deformed freak, however physically deformed, was not a victim of nature or God. Rather, the individual’s physical appearance was a direct reflection of their thoughts and intentions. 3 If these intentions were cruel or evil, their appearance would change to reflect these intentions. If their intentions were pure, their appearance changed to account for their good intentions. As such, all useful information could be taken from the person’s physicality. My analysis will fill this gap in 3 While I will not necessarily be doing this, many scholars might approach these sections with an eye towards disability studies. Deformity and disability often go hand in hand, and the disability theorist may come to similar conclusions. Because normative appearance factors into both disability studies and nineteenthcentury pseudoscience, there is a link that can be made between the two. However, in this chapter, I will not be incorporating a distinct disability studies perspective. Readers interested in the link between disability studies and Victorian monstrosity through physical appearance should consult Lillian Craton’s study, The Victorian Freak Show: The Significance of Disability and Physical Appearance in 19th Century Fiction , which examines the social stigmatization of those physically different or disabled and how these attitudes manifest in Victorian fiction. Szanter 12 order to more fully understand the Victorian attachment to pseudoscientific taxonomies. My analysis will explain why the attachment to these classifications broke down when they were unable to be uniformly applied to all individuals — thus allowing a degree of uncertainty in the face of some evils. Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde We can see a belief in the connection between physical appearance and moral character in a number of Victorian texts. In Robert Louis Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde , the differences in physical appearance between the two eponymous characters are clear. Whereas “good shone upon the countenance” of Doctor Jekyll, we learn that “evil was written broadly and plainly on the face of the other” (Stevenson 51). Stevenson’s novella serves as a useful measure of Victorian explorations of monstrosity. Jekyll is an educated gentleman, and it is unbelievable that he could be committing Hyde’s violent acts. However, even before Sir Danvers Carew’s murder, Mr. Hyde menaces those he encounters. Belief in his menacing character boils down to his physical appearance. His ugliness is indicative of his dangerous and impure character. At one point, Mr. Utterson states, “the man seems hardly human! Something troglodytic . . . or is it the mere radiance of a foul soul that thus transpires through and transfigures, its clay continent . . . if ever I read Satan’s signature upon a face, it is on that of [Jekyll’s] new friend” (Stevenson 17). At this point in the text, Mr. Hyde has harmed no one; his “hardly human” appearance renders him “something troglodytic” and possessing “Satan’s signature upon [his] face.” Hyde is “something” rather than someone; he is “troglodytic” rather than human. Descriptions like these separate humans from the Other. Szanter 13 Even more, being “hardly human” means he must be something other, and in this case, not human. By equating his ugliness to “Satan’s signature,” Stevenson transforms Hyde into demon. His appearance is so damning that he can only be seen in association with Satan. His demonic ugliness indicates a “foul soul” must dwell within him. Hyde’s personal appearance is crucial to the text because descriptions of Mr. Hyde are always peripheral and based on emotion, or perception — very little is actually said about what he looks like physically. Hyde is significantly shorter than Jekyll; Jekyll’s clothes “were enormously too large for him in every measurement” (Stevenson 45). Stevenson provides no details about Hyde’s eyes, hair color, skin color, or weight (45). Because it is his outfit that receives the most detailed description, we are meant to judge him based entirely on his clothing and not his physical appearance. Stevenson does not give a description of what evil is supposed to look like — other than that it is short and dwarfish. This approach problematizes our understanding of Hyde’s character because, without a clear description, he could be anyone. In “The Face of Evil: Physiognomy, Phrenology, and the Gothic Villain,” Bridget Marshall explains that the people of the nineteenth century believed “the markings of evil were not merely fictional devices, but were based on the contemporary sciences of phrenology and physiognomy” (161). It was not uncommon to see scientific data accompanied by drawings of physical differences between a good and evil person in physiognomic and phrenological texts such as those in Johann Caspar Lavater’s Physiognomic Fragments for Furthering the Knowledge and Love of Man (177578) or Cesare Lombroso’s “Illustrative Studies in Criminal Anthropology” (1890). These details were critical to understanding which people were acceptable acquaintances and which should be kept at arm’s length. Stevenson abandons details of physical appearance Szanter 14 while simultaneously bolstering the idea that physicality functions as a precursor to violent criminal activity. Without giving evil a face, Stevenson explains that “there was something abnormal and misbegotten in the very essence of the creature that now faced [Jekyll] — something seizing, surprising and revolting” (45). This is an emotional response to the “abnormal and misbegotten” that informs our imaginative constructions of Hyde’s appearance. While referring to Hyde as a “creature” suggests deformity, there is no indication of how he is creaturelike. He is “seizing, surprising and revolting” but our understanding of this revulsion is stunted by Stevenson’s absent description. The ambiguity of Hyde’s appearance supports the idea that Hyde could be anyone. Dracula Capitalizing on the everyman’s fear of deformed evil, Bram Stoker crafts Count Dracula’s physical appearance to be unmistakably monstrous. While it is true that both Hyde and Dracula share the monstrosity of “otherness,” Stoker’s use of descriptive language differs from Stevenson’s because his paints a clear portrait of Dracula’s monstrous appearance. According to Marshall, “Throughout Stoker’s Dracula , various characters exhibit both common and extensive knowledge of phrenology and physiognomy” (165). This phrenological and physiognomic influence suggests that Stoker characters are aware of what it means to appear monstrous and uses this to their advantage. In the novel, Jonathan Harker gives a detailed account of Dracula’s face: His face was a strong — a very strong — aquiline, with high bridge of the thin nose and peculiarly arched nostrils; with lofty domed forehead, and hair growing Szanter 15 scantily around the temples, but profusely elsewhere. His eyebrows were very massive, almost meeting over the nose, and with busy hair that seemed to curl in its own profusion. The mouth, so far as I could see it under the heavy moustache, was fixed and rather cruellooking, with peculiarly sharp white teeth; these protruded over the lips, whose remarkable ruddiness showed astonishing vitality in a man of his years. For the rest, his ears were pale and at the tops extremely pointed; the chin was broad and strong, and the cheeks first though thin. The general effect was one of extraordinary pallor. (Stoker 2223) The “strong” and “aquiline” vampiric body is criminal by phrenological and physiognomic standards (Marshall 167). Stoker’s description of his “sharp white teeth,” “cruellooking” mouth, and “extremely pointed” ears give the reader a foundation on which to construct a monster. Dracula’s face is characterized by extremes of color uncommon in normal humans. Stoker’s vampire possesses a color palate too extreme to be “normal.” He is a contrast of his “white teeth,” the “remarkable ruddiness” of his lips, and the overall “pallor.” Marshall cites the work of Lombroso and Lavater and explains that Harker’s lengthy description marks the Count as “an unevolved, hence criminal, man,” “indicat[ing] weakness and pusillanimity,” and possessing qualities similar to “the anatomies of lemurs and rodents” (Marshall 167). This description further dehumanizes an already suspicious looking Dracula by aligning his features with rodents and distinctly lowclass animals. The features discussed here are then used to interpret his qualities as an individual; because of his rodentlike face, he must not possess the strength of character expected of a “real man” ending in his classification as weak and pusillanimous. Marshall’s examination of the connections between Stoker’s description and Late Victorian Szanter 16 scientific reasoning reveals a method behind Dracula’s monstrous appearance. Stoker relies on Dracula’s physical deformities in order to indicate the Count’s evil intentions and ward off potential victims. The popularity of Lavater and Lombroso’s texts reveals a Victorian anxiety about physical devolution. The descriptions in Dracula emphasize the core Victorian anxiety of deformity as a physical marker for social persecution. The Count’s deformed figure features predominantly throughout the novel. For instance, Mina describes “his red eyes” (Stoker 110). Jonathan Harker describes the “evil face, the ridge of the nose, the red eyes, the red lips, the awful pallor” of Dracula (269). Dr. Seward notes “the waxen face; the high aquiline nose, on which the light fell in a thin white line; the parted red lips, with the sharp white teeth showing between; and the red eyes” (Stoker 305). Dracula’s facial features consistently mark him as subhuman — a monster or an animal. His “red eyes” indicate his otherness. If eyes are the windows to the soul, the red discoloration of his indicates that he is not human; humans’ eyes do not glow red at night. Instead, he is again aligned with rodents whose eyes glow red at night. His animality devolves him into something less than human. His “parted red lips, with the sharp white teeth showing between” paint an inhuman portrait. Similarly, the massive canines emphasize his animalistic physicality. Dracula is not human. Stoker directly associates monstrosity with physical deformity. Dracula embraces the idea that the physical form is directly representative internal character. His deformed facial features mimic the deformed insides. In contrast, Jekyll and Hyde imagines what deformities Szanter 17 could elicit such revulsion. The textual uses of inner and outer selves seen 4 here corroborates with Victorian readers’ desire for “clear connections between the physical body and moral character” (Bachmann). These taxonomies fed into the Victorians’ desire for a “means of maintaining order through identifying group differences . . . by allowing participants to know quickly something about another person's essential but hidden characteristics” (Collins). The emphasis placed on physical appearance by Victorian culture suggests an anxiety about the potential danger of these and thus the undetectability of “hidden characteristics.” The Picture of Dorian Gray Drawing from these preexisting anxieties, Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray explores an even darker Victorian fear: the unrecognizable monster. Like Stoker’s Dracula , descriptions of young Dorian are frequent. In the opening scenes of the novel, Basil Hallward is in his studio studying, and then working on, a portrait of Dorian Gray. Lord Henry Wotton begins the praise of Dorian’s beautiful appearance. Wotton observes that Dorian’s skin “looks as if [it] was made out of ivory and rose leaves” (Wilde 7) Like Narcissus, he is a “brainless beautiful creature” meant to replace natural beauty “in winter when we have no flowers to look at” (Wilde 7). Descriptions of Dorian’s beauty do not stop at comparisons to flawless Greek idols; later, Hallward –already invested in Dorian’s person — says “his beauty is such that Art cannot express it” (Wilde 13). At this point, Wilde’s use of character description is similar to that in Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde . Wilde uses emotional reaction to paint a picture of the character’s appearance. Both Wilde and Stevenson are unwilling to give their evil 4 See, for instance, Sami Schalk and Kerry Powell’s “What Makes Mr. Hyde So Scary?: Disability as a Result of Evil and Cause of Fear.” Szanter 18 characters a distinctive face or body. Granted, Wilde’s readers do not need to wait as long for a detailed description of Dorian’s beauty as they do for Stevenson’s Hyde. Wotton explains, “he was certainly wonderfully handsome, with his finelycurved scarlet lips, his frank blue eyes, his crisp gold hair” (Wilde 17). Dorian possesses the traits of the typical courtly beauty: blonde hair, blue eyes, red lips, and, as described above, the skin of a marble Adonis. With such a description, Wilde does not encourage us to view Dorian as a monster. I have already established that Victorian audiences would attribute this beauty to internal morality but we know this is not the case. Dorian transforms into a monster and acts on desire alone. Dorian’s unrealistic beauty does not denote an unrealistically good soul. Instead, Dorian’s monstrosity is undetectable by the existing Victorian taxonomies for detecting a person with evil intentions. This inversion of expectations makes it possible for even the most beautiful individuals to become monstrous; even the handsome have the potential to succumb to Dorian’s fate and then corrupt those around him. The problem is that all others must engage this new monstrosity without physical warning and without protection. The physical deformities that mark Dracula and Hyde are uniformly absent from Dorian . Whereas Hyde and Dracula have a physical appearance that repels 5 potential victims, Dorian’s physical appearance allows his victims to be completely seduced. His outward beauty should act as a reflection of his inward goodness, his moral purity. They “trust him at once” because there is no physical indication that they must do otherwise (Wilde 17). While believing the ability to see evil and protects potential victims from it, Wilde’s story forces Victorian 5 A good analysis on the mind/body separation here can be found in Rachel HerzlBetz’s “A Paratactic ‘Missing Link’: Dorian Gray and the Performance of Embedded Modernity.” HerzlBetz discusses how Dorian’s lack of physical deformity speak to a divided identity that marks him as nonnormative, or monstrous. Szanter 19 readers to accept that their existing categories of good and evil might not work in the real world. Marshall, also examining Dorian’s beautiful appearance, observes that his physicality “utterly confuses Dorian’s friends and acquaintances, who truly believe that a villain must have a villainous appearance” (Marshall 168). Dorian confounds those who follow his descent by remaining beautiful. Hallward, upon meeting up with Dorian to discuss his everdescending reputation in society, explains to Dorian that “sin is a thing that writes itself across a man’s face” therefore “Dorian, with [his] pure, bright, innocent face, and [his] marvelous untroubled youth” could be guilty of no such impurities (126). By exonerating Dorian from his social crimes via his unscathed person, Hallward represents the Victorian social belief “that a man who looks so good could not be so bad” (Marshall 168). His friends believe that Dorian cannot be responsible for his crimes because he has none of the physical markings of a criminal. The characterizations in these texts articulate a central fear about appearances, especially those that are deceptive or monstrous. The repetition of this anxiety reveals a preoccupation with the relationship between the outer and inner self. If character can only be articulated through physicality, grappling with the invisible becomes a serious problem. It threatens to upend the scientific structures that allowed people to make sense of the world around them. The existence of physiognomy and phrenology provided Victorian people with a manual that allowed a sense of safety from potential threats. These texts challenge the effectiveness of these existing classifications but complicate them further by providing no suitable replacement. For a culture that valued the appearance of goodness and purity, the absence of physical markers for evil allowed anyone — attractive or otherwise — to engage in deceit, which then allowed unsuspecting people to fall victim to it. Szanter 20 Chapter 3: Monstrosity and Disease While physical abnormality preoccupied many Victorian minds, high Victorian monster fiction reveals overwhelming and “almost obsessive concern with documentation and they all exhibit a sinister mistrust of the notsaid, the unspoken, the hidden, and the silent” (Halberstam 130). Mimicking medical practices, the need to document the unobservable is prevalent within these late nineteenthcentury texts. In The History of Sexuality, vol 1 , for instance, Foucault explains that the Victorian era “speaks verbosely of its own silence, [and] takes great pains to relate in detail the things it does not say” (8). Here, Foucault implies, while Victorians may have stopped talking about these topics directly, they moved these discussions into new venues, such as literature. By looking at what texts subliminally represent, particularly in regards to fear, we can see what was deemed too problematic to address openly and thereby understand cultural anxieties. High Victorian monsters explain some of these by being “meaning machines” that almost always represent some form of physical corruption or deformity (Halberstam 131). In this chapter, I argue that these texts reveal deepseated social anxieties about the appearance of the sick by not adhering to Victorian taxonomies of disease and the diseased body. Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Psychoanalytic analyses of Stevenson’s Jekyll and Hyde are abundant, and many explore the possibility of Dr. Jekyll as an undiagnosed schizophrenic. In his review of Neel Burton’s The Meaning of Madness , Andrew Papanikitas points out that, “In his (sadly incinerated) first draft, Stevenson allegedly did not envisage a physical change in his hero but a disguise that allowed Jekyll to get away with things his position did not allow” (1). The absence of a separate physical form for both Jekyll and Hyde suggests that the personality shift would Szanter 21 occur inside the person’s mind and not physically. However, modern analysis disassociates Jekyll and Hyde from schizophrenia because, as Burton describes,“multiple personality [is] rare and not a core feature of schizophrenia” (1). Burton suggests this particular transformation combines two changes: the Jekyll/Hyde character functions as a literary manifestation of manicdepressive disorder; and second, that the character also exhibits a clear physical transformation. It is Stevenson’s inclusion of that physical transformation that problematizes his monstrosity. In Monsters: Evil Beings, Mythical Beasts, and All Manner of Imaginary Terrors, David Gilmore explains that monsters are “always depicted looming over small, weak, and overshadowed humans” (174). Gilmore interprets “looming” both literally and figuratively. The monster, according to Gilmore, casts a literal“shadow” over the unsuspecting victims. Hyde is significantly smaller in size and stature than the docile Jekyll. But, as the narrative concludes, we realize that Mr. Hyde is successfully consuming Jekyll. In the section entitled “Henry Jekyll’s Full Statement of the Case,” Jekyll admits that “man is not truly one, but truly two” (Stevenson 48). In admitting that there are “truly two” sides to every being, this must also admit that both sides cannot be not simultaneously visible. Making both sides simultaneously visible would detract from the dichotomy Stevenson presents in Jekyll and Hyde , where an individual’s dual natures exist inside one unchanging body. Drawing from this, fear of disease 6 manifests because of its potential to be unrecognizable. While Hyde’s countenance strikes fear into those who look upon him, he is the literary illustration of a diseased being. Because Hyde is outwardly repellent, readers are more comfortable with his wickedness because they can avoid him. Jekyll causes 6 To clarify, I do not use the term “unchanging” to imply that the body remains in a stagnated state. Rather, I use unchanging show that bodies do not naturally change from one form to another as Jekyll changes into Hyde. Szanter 22 anxiety for readers because he is the unrecognizably diseased. There is no explicit indication that Jekyll and Hyde are the same. Rather, the narrative simply reveals Hyde as his alter ego at the very end. Fear of both psychological disease and how to deal with the afflicted weighed on the Victorian mind. Mental institutions that practiced their primitive forms of therapy were wellknown and rightlyfeared. These primitive forms of therapy often originated from a misunderstanding of how the mind works–especially when it is not functioning normally. In, “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: A New Theory of the ManicDepressive Disorder,” Benjamin B. Wolman lists paramutuals — a psychological term to express those areas of the psyche that interpret the reactions of others — as the catalyst to Jekyll’s willing and unwilling transformations into Mr. Hyde: “paramutuals are overconcerned with the attitudes of others toward themselves and are exceedingly sensitive even to a slight sign of rejection or disrespect” (Wolman 1024). As such, it is the fate of Jekyll that his “polar twins” must “continuously struggl[e]” against one another (Stevenson 49). Dr. Jekyll initiated his own transformation by ingesting chemicals. This contamination of the healthy body serves as a warning. “Dr. Lanyon’s Narrative” finds the eponymous speaker examining some chemicals: The powders that were neatly enough made up, but not with the nicety of the dispensing chemist; so that it was plain they were of Jekyll’s private manufacture . . . I found what seemed to be a simple crystalline salt of a white colours. The phial . . . might have been about halffull of a bloodred liquor, which was highly pungent to the sense of smell and seemed to me to contain Szanter 23 phosphorus and some volatile ether. At the other ingredients, I could make no guess. (Stevenson 44) Dr. Lanyon’s status as a physician lends authority to his analysis of the chemicals. By establishing his experience and education, Stevenson increases reader anxiety because Lanyon, the trained doctor, cannot identify all the chemicals Jekyll uses. The implication of unidentifiable substances points to a nineteenthcentury concern about the unknown. Failure 7 to heed this unspoken warning could result in succumbing to the same fate as Jekyll. This text reveals anxieties about the consequences of the unknown and works through those anxieties by providing scenarios in which they are inescapable — namely, as long as one avoids ingesting an amalgamation of foreign substances, one could avoid falling prey to the diseases of their own mind. This narrative uses mental illness to subvert Victorian taxonomies of disease by focusing on the mind rather than the body. While physical illness often produces physical symptoms, mental diseases does not always come with physical markers. This focus on the psyche over the body makes Jekyll and Hyde’s disease problematic because, though one can take precautions to avoid the hideous Hyde, one will not feel the need to avoid Jekyll. Dracula Unlike Jekyll and Hyde , with its emphasis on the diseased psyche, Bram Stoker’s Dracula discusses the diseased and distorted body. The vampiric body displays obvious features of bodily corruption, such as glowing eyes, deformed facial features, and devolved physicality. As a part of this, I argue that Stoker’s vampires embody one of the major preoccupations of late 7 George Levine’s Dying to Know: Scientific Epistemology and Narrative in Victorian England provides an indepth look into scientific practices and epistemology. He examines the link between scientific discovery and selfabnegation, even to the point of death. Szanter 24 nineteenthcentury blood medicine: porphyria. In “Retracing the Shambling Steps of the Undead: The Blended Folkloric Elements of Vampirism in Bram Stoker’s Dracula, ” Alexis Milmine argues that Stoker’s vampirism “transcends time and the ethnic boundaries of folklore, drawing on a multitude of legends about this supernatural being as well as twisting the traditional folklore of Eastern Europe to create the misguided belief in Count Dracula as a typical Transylvanian or Romanian vampire” (Milmine 33). Although modern texts often use Stoker’s mythology as a template for traditional vampirism, Stoker actually reinvented the vampire for the modern age by deviating from older vampire mythologies. In this section, I argue that Stoker’s vampires are distinctly porphyric. In 1889, Beran Stokvis — a multiPh. D. and medicallytrained Dutch physician occasionally considered an inspiration for Abraham Van Helsing — published “Over Twee Zeldzame Kleurstoffen in Urine Van Zieken,” which described a “decomposition product of 8 blood pigment, whose identity with haematoporphyrin . . . is in the highest degree probable” 9 (Stokvis). The first recognizable side effect of the disease was a blood byproduct excreted in the urine of patients. The “bright red urine, resembling blood” was accompanied by other physical symptoms such as an “accumulation of photosensitive pigments in the skin, leading to photosensitivity, and phosphorescent pigments in the mucus membranes around the mouth and eye, causing them to be red in daylight but to glow at night” (Keith 65). Exploring other similarities between these symptoms and traditional vampire mythology, Keith explains, “The photophobia and neurological and psychological sequelae seen in the advanced stages of 8 In English, “About Two Unusual Dyes in the Urine of Patients” (PubMed). 9 An ironfree heme molecule, a decomposition product of hemoglobin found in the urine of certain conditions (Taber’s Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary [2009]). Szanter 25 porphyria are also consistent with mythical characteristics of werewolves and vampires” (such as erratic behaviors, a penchant for coming out at night, and physical abnormalities) (64). Paired with these symptoms, the “speculated relationship between porphyria and vampirism . . . received a great deal of media attention” and inspired vivid visualizations about vampires who walked among the people (Keith 63). These symptoms are clearly similar to those associated with vampirism. Based on its rarity, some folklore scholars have since discredited the disease as a possible origin for worldwide vampire mythologies for two reasons. One reason is that porphyria is a fairly uncommon disease. And the second reason is that humans are drawn to “spectacle vampirism,” such as noticeable physical symptoms and similarities to human decomposition. However, the late Victorian society that reveled in blood did not necessarily want to detach the two from one another. As a result, vampire mania resurfaced as fear and myth enmeshed. The brand of vampirism displayed by Stoker’s vampires seems porphyric. In melding traditional vampire folklores with porphyria, Stoker invented what modern audiences consider to be the “real” vampire. Stoker draws on a multitude of legends and explanations for vampirism to create a new hybrid mythology drawn from Eastern European, Mediterranean, and Celtic sources. Stoker’s vampires embrace different symptoms of vampirism that, when combined, suggest an anxiety about porphyria, and the novel is filled with examples that emphasize this connection. In “Biomedical Origins of Vampirism,” Edward O. Keith explores how older, medically uneducated societies associated certain diseases with vampirism; porphyria is one such disease. First, Keith presents the porphyric symptom of “pigments in the mucus membranes around the Szanter 26 mouth and eye, causing them to be red” (65). In Dracula, the red eye motif is often present and always associated with the presence or perceived vision of a vampire or vampiric creature. Lucy Westenra, shortly after turning into a vampire, “murmured as if to herself: — ‘His red eyes again! They are just the same’” (106). Mina Murray, the female protagonist of Dracula , — who has yet to encounter a vampire — also has “a vague memory of something long and dark with red eyes” (110). Two individuals — Lucy and Mina — observe the same eye related coloration independent of one another. Seward, a member of Abraham Van Helsing’s cohort, reinforces this consistency during his encounter with Renfield. Renfield, one of Count Dracula’s minions, experiences a need for blood and its “life force” that causes him to experience symptomatic similarities to his Master — even though Renfield is not a biological vampire. Dr. Seward exclaimed that the corrupted human “sneered at [him], and his white face looked out of the mist with his red eyes gleaming” (298). Ascribing this feature to his vampires, Stoker uses the red eye symptom present in those experiencing acute porphyria. But red eyes are not the only deformity on the porphyric’s face. The red eye phenomenon in porphyria stems from high levels of pigmentation within and around the mucus membranes, and infected individuals’ mouths exhibit a similar redness. The Count, after drinking from a victim, looked “as if his youth had been half renewed . . . the mouth was redder than ever” (58). His red mouth can harken back to symptoms of porphyria. Later on in the text, Renfield exhibits the same symptom when he is seen “laughing with his red mouth” (297). Considering Stoker’s vampirism deviates from more traditional mythologies, it makes sense that Renfield would adhere to the same types of symptoms as his pseudosire. The indication of redness in the mouth suggests some kind of contagion; their bodies are both Szanter 27 suffering from similar symptoms. This internal corruption has altered their body’s chemistry and changed their physical appearances. Vampires, famously, must avoid sunlight. While the some explanations ascribe this inability to their role as demons and creatures of the night, porphyria attacks its victims with photosensitivity as a result of an “accumulation of photosensitive pigments in the skin” (Keith 65). These pigments pool in the top layers of the skin that, when exposed to sunlight, cause both burning sensations and boils on the skin of the infected. Those with the disease confine themselves to dark spaces with little or no artificial light; they often avoid the painful consequences of sun exposure. This extreme photosensitivity usually occurs in those with the rarest form of the disease — Acute Intermittent Porphyria (AIP). Most sufferers of less common porphyria variants can still go outside; they simply experience mild discomfort and visual sensitivity in sunlight. In examining Lucy after she becomes a vampire, Van Helsing notes that the sun’s “light showed the ravages in poor Lucy’s strength. She was hardly able to turn her head” (166). Van Helsing prophetically tells Seward that he “see[s] no light in life over her horizon” (161). Seeming to indicate the fate that Lucy has in store for her, Van Helsing reveals that her ability to physically see light or feel the sun’s warmth is, literally, gone. Such photosensitivity is characteristic of those infected with AIP. Lucy’s symptoms could exacerbate her vulnerable transition stage. The Count presents an interesting case in this analysis. Dracula is centuries old and has the ability to walk in broad daylight. He does not exhibit pain when exposed to direct sunlight. He merely loses the ability to perform his more advanced skills, such as shape shifting. He easily fends off pursuers, indicating that he maintains his supernatural strength. These Szanter 28 variations in Stoker’s vampirism mimic the porphyria spectrum. While both are “vampires,” Lucy and Dracula exhibit different effects of their shared disease. These variations reveal anxieties about symptomatic disease because this disease’s symptoms manifest unpredictably. In addition to the above symptoms, other side effects are the “neurological and psychological sequelae” (Keith 65). The diseased individual into a trancelike, hallucinatory state. The idea of a trance directly links to the vampires within the novel. When examining Lucy’s undead body, Van Helsing points out, “She was bitten by the vampire when she was in a trance, sleepwalking . . . and in trance could he best come to take more blood. In trance she died, and in trance she is UnDead” (Stoker 216). Regardless of Lucy’s trances when she was not yet a vampire, the trance is a product of their infection. The idea of trances is relatively rare in vampire mythology, but was wildly popular in sensationalized nineteenthcentury occultism. Dracula creates an undeniable bond between a trancestate and vampirism: a trance allows victims to be “bitten by the vampire,” a trancedeath creates a new vampire, and “in trance she is UnDead” because being a vampire necessitates being a perpetual tranceexistence. In this text, trances are inextricably tied to vampirism. Later in the novel, Van Helsing and Dr. Seward manipulate Mina — who is transforming — into entering a necessary trance. Van Helsing states, “It be that she can, by our hypnotic trance, tell what the Count see and hear” (Stoker 343). In this intriguing way, Mina is used as a transitional vampiric conduit where a trance can be induced in order to communicate with the Count. This is problematic because it means 10 that an individual 10 While not a central concern of this paper, the trances prove an interesting element of Stoker’s novel as they introduce a discussion on depictions of gender and vampirism. The female vampires in the text all engage in sexual acts as the result of trances. Lucy’s first sexual encounter with Dracula occurs while she is entranced. And similarly, the female vampires attempt to entrance Jonathan Harker for sexual reasons. Lucy’s seduction plays into her role as a feminine woman —she is sexually conquered by the masculine Count . However, the female vampires exhibit masculine qualities by acting as the seducers rather than the seduced, illustrating them as sexually aggressive and, therefore, less feminine than human women. Szanter 29 can be victimized without being fully infected. The contagion of vampirism has not fully contaminated Mina, but she has fallen prey to its symptoms nonetheless. Porphyric symptoms throughout the text indicate deep anxieties in the Victorian mind about how disease transforms “normal” people into the Other. The significance of Stoker’s narrative is that it provides readers with a medical methodology. The hunting party does not pursue their prey blindly; there is a period of research and medical inquiry that precedes their attacks on the vampires. Van Helsing diagnoses those infected individuals and attempts to “cure” them using his medical knowledge and experience. Van Helsing begins his curative process by transfusing Lucy with new, clean blood. The idea that tainted blood houses the disease is critical to understanding this brand of vampirism. The disease lives in the blood, is 11 transferred to new victims via blood contamination, and should theoretically be expelled by replacing the tainted blood with untainted blood. Compounding this, vampires in Dracula must consume the blood of humans (i.e. those with clean blood) to survive. Using Van Helsing as a source of medical knowledge, Stoker provides readers with information about this disease, its effects, and how to avoid contracting it. His vivid portraits of diseased individuals amount to a list of physical markers that should be avoided at all costs. The anxieties present in Dracula stem from a cultural fear of being diseased, and that is the “othering” of an otherwise normal individual through 11 The tainted blood problem applies to Lucy particularly because she is a woman. Anxieties about tainted blood go far back but have strong Victorian roots in the proliferation of STDs and blood corruption, especially in regards to prostitution. A female dominated career, prostitutes suffer from social stigmatization for many reasons, one being their heightened exposure to STDs and contraction of diseases that tainted their physical body from the inside. Lucy, though not a prostitute, engages in sexual acts with the Count and contracts his vampiric disease that taints her blood and transforms her into the diseased Other. For more information on the intersection of tainted blood and prostitution, readers should consult Amanda Anderson’s Tainted Souls and Painted Faces: The Rhetoric of Fallenness in Victorian Culture. Szanter 30 biological corruption — similar to, but still not as outwardly terrifying as the physical deformity I discussed earlier. The Picture of Dorian Gray While psychological fears explored in Jekyll and Hyde or Dracula legitimize collective anxieties of Victorian audiences, they do not tap into the psyche as definitively as those expressed by The Picture of Dorian Gray . Wilde’s protagonist, Dorian Gray, embodies deviance and hedonism while presenting it to the public as unmarred morality. The identifiable monster is a theme that Wilde’s novel abandons altogether Rather, Victorian readers encountered something far more sinister: the idea that “our monsters are our innermost selves” (Gilmore 194). And, by being “innermost” are invisible to those around us. Wilde’s narrative sits in psychology more so than Dracula or Jekyll and Hyde . Although disease in texts like Jekyll and Hyde or Dracula manifests physically, disease in Dorian Gray is displaced, or removed, altogether. In the text, Dorian wishes “it were I who was to be always young” while the “picture was to grow old! For that — for that — I would give everything! Yes, there is nothing in the whole world I would not give! I would give my soul for that!” (Wilde 25). The text suggests that men and women both experience the desire to remain “always young” and that, though not always explicitly, something else could “grow old” in their stead; Wotton vocalizes this when he exclaims, “youth is the one thing worth having” (Wilde 22). But his words carry with them something besides shallow desire for youth. Making a Faustian bargain, Dorian “would give [his] soul,” making a spiritual trade that transfers his soul out of his physical person and into the portrait. For the duration of the novel, all deviant acts transform the portraitDorian’s appearance rather than realDorian’s physical appearance. This Szanter 31 removal of the soul from the body presents a new monstrosity because it is not merely a physical manifestation of internal corruption as presented in Stevenson’s and Stoker’s characters. Instead, this new monstrosity never mars the “corrupt” individual. The plot of Dorian Gray provides a narrative for what would happen if external corruption, which typically manifests itself internally, could be manifested somewhere outside the individual. This idea implies that all people, no matter how good or pure, have the potential to displace their soul and their sin. Part of Dorian’s flair for hedonism and sexual deviance stems from the reassurance that comes with the portrait. Dorian succumbs to the disease of selfobsession and uses the portrait as a mirror, reflecting the part of himself that was removed. He adopts the medical practice of analysis to regard the painting as a physician would analyze a patient. Dorian “would examine with minute care, and sometimes monstrous and terrible delight, the hideous lines that seared the wrinkling forehead or crawled around the heavy sensual mouth” (Wilde 106). He “mocked the misshapen body and the failing limbs” (Wilde 106). Giving Dorian agency to “examine” himself allows readers to entertain the idea that Dorian is suffering from a very real disease of sin. While not a medical ailment, it becomes clear throughout the course of the novel that the physical symptoms seen on the portrait are the direct result of an internal contamination. Though not a diagnosable disease, it is sin transformed which behaves as disease would. Dorian’s is not a physical disease of the body but a spiritual disease of the soul. The idea of Dorian as an outlier in the field of medicine appears in Bridget Marshall’s article “The Face of Evil: Phrenology, Physiognomy, and the Gothic Villain.” Marshall explains that Dorian’s “portrait becomes an experiment where he alone can observe the effects of his wanton lifestyle” (170). His experimentation becomes more obvious as the narrative concludes, Szanter 32 and Dorian believes “he had spared one innocent thing” and “perhaps if his life became pure, he would be able to expel every sign of evil passion from the face” (Wilde 182). Where earlier in the text Dorian engages in cause and effect experimentation to see the progressing symptoms of sindisease on the portrait, he hypothesizes that doing good deeds will cure his portrait of the disease’s physical effects. In this way, “Wilde’s story focuses throughout on the effects of sin on the appearance, not on the actual sins themselves” (Marshall 171). Sin functions as a disease; disease is ailment that can be cured, or treated. However, Dorian “could see no chance” for his treatment’s success because “in the eyes there was a look of cunning, and in the mouth the curved wrinkle of the hypocrite” (Wilde 182). A good deed, although interpreted by Dorian as the medicine to his sickness, cannot cure him as it was “through vanity he had spared [Hetty Merton]” (Wilde 183). Interpreting sin as a spiritual disease, the cure cannot come from a place of vice, only virtue. Therefore, a genuine good deed would be the cure for a diseased Dorian, but his ability to act from a place of goodness has all but disappeared. Dorian’s interpretations of sin as disease are not uncommon for the nineteenthcentury. In The Preacher , a collection of nineteenthcentury Christian sermons, a sermon entitled “Moral Diseases and Their Remedy” claims, “Moral evil is . . . described as a disease, and the mercy of God as the only remedy” (262). Wilde’s appropriation of scientific nomenclature to illustrate Dorian’s condition is in line with Victorian beliefs of sin as a spiritual disease. By prescribing a remedy, this sermon understands sin the same way. Reinforcing this belief, the sermon says, “Bodily disease consists in disorder , or some derangement in the system. And what is the disease of the soul, but something analogous to this? . . . All disease has a tendency to death ; so has this moral disease. ‘Sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death’” ( Preacher 262). Dorian’s story Szanter 33 follows this trajectory. He recognizes that his disease is not physical but moral. And that it is, in fact, a disease. However, the inverted nature of sin as disease means that its treatment is not chemical but spiritual; he can only be saved through repentance and the grace of God. Through his experimentations with mercy, Dorian diagnoses himself with sin. Dorian’s selfdiagnosis provides an interesting slant to Wilde’s narrative. Using spiritual terms, Dorian’s journey shifts into a medical discourse and yields scientific conclusions. Towards the end of the story, Dorian realizes that the cure for his illness is “to confess, to suffer public shame, and to make public atonement,” but he is not prepared to embrace any of these as his cure (Wilde 183). Instead, he embraces death as more attractive than “public shame” or the revelation of this portraitface. However, in the end, not even Dorian’s “deal with the Devil” can exempt him from suffering the physical damage associated with sin and immorality. He “stabbed the picture” and was discovered “lying on the floor . . . withered wrinkled, and loathsome of visage” (Wilde 18384). In the end, all who succumb to moral corruption must bear the marks of their sin. As Marshall writes, “Despite Dorian’s deceptive beauty, his story, like that of Count Dracula, still supports the notion that bodies do reflect the state of the souls within them” (171). Analyzing Wilde’s text through the language of medicine, he illuminates a concern about more than simple immorality. Presenting sin as disease, Wilde redefines sin as something that can be cured through goodness and repentance — echoing the ideas present in “Moral Diseases and Their Remedy.” Dorian’s assumed position as a moralityphysician situates him at the center of a conversation that takes the spiritual and reimagines it as something concrete. While not as obviously scientific as ailments in Jekyll and Hyde or Dracula , Dorian’s disease is, arguably, the Szanter 34 most physically devastating of the three. The soul and the body cannot be eternally separated; the diseased sinners must always own up to their physical corruption. Regardless of their inherent differences, one particular anxiety lurks behind all three texts: the behaviors of all three “physicians.” Stevenson’s Jekyll and Hyde has two central characters who are formally trained doctors: Dr. Lanyon and Dr. Jekyll. Jekyll’s Victorian audiences would have understood and supported Jekyll’s selfexperimentations as falling in line with nineteenthcentury scientific methodology. Aligning with traditional practices of nineteenthcentury medicine, his reward is an increasingly permanent transformation into a monstrous “other” in the search for knowledge. Exhibiting similar acts of selfexperimentation, Dorian Gray experiments on his portrait in order to observe the effects of immoral and hedonistic behavior. But Stoker’s text takes advantage of this gray area, increasing the ambiguity. Vampires present Dr. Van Helsing with quasiunethical, though certainly immoral, circumstances. With poor Lucy spiraling towards unnatural existence as a literal monster, his decision to cease treatment and pursue her murder presents no ideal outcomes. However, from a purely medical vantage point, his actions are in direct conflict with the Hippocratic oath required of all physicians; to pursue Lucy’s, and also Dracula’s, death, he abandons his responsibility to her as a patient, or a diseased person. Audiences may be quicker to forgive Van Helsing considering his difficult narrative situation. However, his actions can be interpreted as problematic given the similar moral issues of doctors Jekyll and Dorian. These texts express an anxiety about disease in the High Victorian period that delicately walks the line between the plausible and implausible. The fear of unrecognizable disease Szanter 35 manifests in the bodies of monsters who can be safely rejected by mainstream society. This idea can be seen in Homi Bhaba’s postcolonial writings, particularly “Of Mimicry and Man: The Ambivalence of Colonial Discourse” where he discusses the “authorized versions of otherness” agreed upon by society atlarge (129). These monsters elicit fear from their place in the unknown, or unauthorized. Certain forms of “other” are acceptable so long as they adhere to social categories of otherness. When they deviate from these categories by behaving in deviant ways (e.g. Hyde exists inside a noncriminal Jekyll), they are no longer adherent to existing taxonomies of diseased bodies. However, these authors also present situations in which those who most desire to avoid the diseased (e.g. middle and upper classes) fall prey to their misleading physical symptoms. While Mr. Hyde repels those around him, Dr. Jekyll belongs to the upper class of educated individuals who trust him. Dracula, though being a clear monster in his vampiric state, possesses powers capable of overcoming even the most virtuous of people (e.g. Mina Murray). Dorian Gray embodies the pinnacle of immoral behavior in his adoption of a hedonistic and unethical lifestyle. Yet, it is the portrait’s preservation of his unmarred beauty that calms those around him and prevents them from protecting themselves, and their reputations, from his immoral selfindulgence. All in all, these texts reveal deepseated anxieties about the appearance of moral undesirables by not adhering to Victorian taxonomies of disease and the diseased body. Szanter 36 Chapter 4 : Monstrosity and Criminality Existing literature on Victorian crime takes myriad points of view on how to understand the social reaction to sensationalized crime. In her The Invention of Murder: How the Victorians Revelled in Death and Detection and Created Modern Crime (2011) , Judith Flanders analyzes how Victorian print culture revolutionized cultural understandings of the criminal. Using newspapers, broadsides, pamphlets, novels, and essays, she argues that modern conceptions of the criminal as celebrity, the media’s tendency to dramatize violence and gore, and contemporary methods for police detection all originate in the Victorian era. Flanders asserts that, prior to the nineteenthcentury, the public’s interest in crime and violence was regional, but the development of widelydistributed print media made crime a nationwide topic of interest. The depth of this interest impacted police officers and detectives who felt the pressure of public scrutiny. Looking for ways to bring these sensationalized criminals to justice, they employed a tool used by the public to profile criminals: “Criminal Anthropology.” Criminal Anthropology is an amalgamation of physiognomic and phrenological principles that allow detectives to profile a suspect’s face for features that denoted criminal proclivities. In “A ‘Criminal Type’ in all but Name: British Prison Medical Officers and the ‘Anthropological’ Approach to the Study of Crime (c. 18651895),” Neil Davie explores extensive use of criminal anthropology by nineteenthcentury police departments. Davie argues that, while some policemen were against this practice for its inconsistency, the widespread popularity of physiognomic principles outweighed its dubious effectiveness. His analysis reveals that police dependence on criminal anthropology stemmed from a desire to catch criminals quickly and thereby alleviate the public’s pressure on them to produce results. Secondarily, Szanter 37 because of popular understandings of criminal anthropology, police officers often used their biases against “criminal types” subconsciously, even if they publicly spoke out against this pseudoscience. In The Victorian Criminal (2008), Storey attributes the national panic to the complicated backgrounds of infamous killers. While some adhered to standards of criminal appearance and socioeconomic class, whitecollar crime makes apprehending and punishing criminals problematic. Differentiating between a rural criminal and an urban criminal, Story examines how police profiling became a necessary, if somewhat ineffective, tool for the Victorian police. Taking a slightly different view, Ellen L. O’Brien’s Crime in Verse: The Poetics of Murder in the Victorian Era emphasizes the Victorian tendency to strip violent crime of its brutality. Instead of secluding themselves from society for fear of victimization, O’Brien explains that they transferred their anxieties into poetry, books, and songs in order to reclaim the fear and manifest it into something less frightening. Though varying in their particular approaches to the topic, these authors indicate that Victorian society has a particular fascination with all types of crime and criminals. They suggest this fascination stems from social anxieties about a lack of precision in police detection coupled with sensationalized media that portrayed violent crime as a common occurrence that affects all social classes. Sensationalized violent crime in late Victorian and fin de siècle England significantly affected the population. With the popularity of widedistribution printing, pamphlets, penny dreadfuls, broadsides, books, and especially newspapers were able to keep abreast of public intrigue in violence and violent crime. As Neil R. Storey explains in The Victorian Criminal , “the nineteenth century was punctuated by some of the most dramatic and horrible crimes of Szanter 38 modern times, reported in lurid detail even in the respectable national and provincial newspapers” (5). The criminal classes did not simply consist of the poor; because of this shift from povertybased criminality to widespread criminality, the public popularized the pseudosciences of physiognomy and phrenology. Because the category of poor was no longer an effective way to categorize criminal, the public required a new set of classifications in order to identify those who posed a potential threat. Widely disregarded by modern science, physiognomy and phrenology gave the nineteenthcentury a new set of taxonomies that can accommodate and explain social anxieties over violent crime. Expanding on this obsession with violent crime, Flanders also describes how “what might be termed ‘murder sightseeing’ was a popular pastime, and many went ‘from curiosity to examine the premises,’ where they entered ‘and saw dead bodies’” (Flanders 3). Murder sightseeing also allowed the public to view the dead bodies of murder victims for a small fee and, in the end, demonstrate the Victorian fascination with excessive violence. Exacerbating this fascination was none other than Jack the Ripper. While the 1888 Whitechapel murders struck fear into the hearts of Londoners, they attempted to understand this murderer’s mind in various ways, like crime museums or crime literature. Megha Anwer’s “Murder in Black and White: Victorian Crime Scenes and the Ripper Photographs” examines how frantically Victorian people reacted to the Ripper crimes. She asserts that the British public hungered for photographs that revealed the types of individuals the Ripper was targeting. Her analysis examines the kinds of messages being relayed to the public through the gender politics of these photos, but contends that the photographs were staged in a way that comments on the “broader Victorian art aesthetic.” Her analysis takes into account the Victorian need to identify types of victims as a Szanter 39 first step towards identifying the type of person committing these murders. Although her arguments identify the need for a type, she does not address how the public coped with signs that these “type” classifications were insufficient as far as protection from being victimized. It is no surprise, then, that the Victorians clamored for a way to recognize evil. Pseudosciences such as physiognomy and phrenology gave them an ability to do just that. Advanced by individuals such as Cesare Lombroso and Alphonse Bertillion, these pseudoscientific theories became instrumental to both British and American police forces and prison systems because they enabled them to profile the “criminal type” (Storey 6). The inability to see passed the pseudoscientific explanations created a dependency on these explanations that could have blinded the people from identifying real patterns of criminal behavior. As described by Carrie A. Rentschler in “The Physiognomic Turn,” these systems for identifying deviance were so impactful on nineteenthcentury conceptions of criminality that these methods became an “ideological and highly technologized treatment of the human face and form” (231). In effect, these taxonomies became scientific proof for criminal behavior and intent. These pseudosciences allowed individuals to examine the face of the accused and determine whether or not this person was a criminal. Phrenology, which studied protuberances and curvatures of the skull, asserted that certain types of curvatures or bumps indicated a tendency towards evil or villainy while others invoked trust (Marshall 162). The popularity of these pseudosciences meant that novels such as Dracula, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and The Picture of Dorian Gray provided descriptive references to their fictional characters that establish their (im)morality. Desires for recognizable criminality come as no surprise in a culture where violent crime was not only normal, but common entertainment. Szanter 40 Current scholarship on physiognomy and criminality fails to address how Victorians reacted when these taxonomic systems failed to identify violent criminal and thus prevent violent crime. Much of the existing scholarship on Victorian pseudoscience and criminality omits discussions about how these pseudosciences were problematic because they prevented the population from recognizing that these systems were faulty at best. In this chapter, I argue that these texts reveal a desire to make plain the idea that unexpected individuals could be capable of brutality when taxonomies designed to prevent violent crime prove useless in the real world. The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Published in 1886, two years before the Ripper’s murder of Annie Chapman, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde explored the possibility that a good man has an internal, dormant evil. This notion outraged Victorians desperate to reject “the premise that every human being has a demon imprisoned within them that the right concoctions or chemicals could release on society” (Storey 58). Discomfort with this duality was only increased by the novella’s implication that an upstanding gentleman such as Dr. Jekyll could commit crimes of this caliber. While the trampling of a small child early in the novella’s text lacks murderous intensity, Sir Danvers Carew’s murder mimics the types of violence common in popularized Victorian murders. Similarities can be drawn between this type of violence and those seen in the Ripper’s murders. Both Carew and victims like Annie Chapman were killed on the streets, and their bodies mutilated in gruesome ways. While Carew’s bludgeoned body differs from the surgical cuts found on Chapman’s, both were left out in the open as the kind of spectacle preferred by murdersightseers. Szanter 41 The descriptions of Hyde’s encounter with Carew exhibit “insensate cruelty” (Stevenson 22). Encountering each other on a dimly lit street, the maid was shocked by the “great flame of anger” that arose from Hyde towards Danvers, described by the maid as an “aged and beautiful gentleman with white hair” (21). This explosion of anger caused Carew to “step back” from Hyde, who “broke out of all bounds and clubbed him to the earth” (22). Not satisfied with his attack, the maid explains his “ape like fury” as he was “trampling his victim under foot, and hailing down a storm of blows, under which the bones were audibly shattered and the body jumped upon the roadway” (22). This description of public, violent crime represented reality and not just fiction; though predating the Ripper murders, this novella comes roughly a decade after Henry Wainwright’s murder of Harriet Lane. Sensationalized by papers such as Illustrated Police , Lane’s body was found wrapped in cloth on the side of a London’s Borough High Street (Storey). While not a common occurrence, dead bodies left on the street, as Carew’s was, connect fiction to reality and aid in the suspension of disbelief. Underpinning the savagery associated with Carew’s murder, the language describing Hyde’s physicality is distinctly inhuman. While Carew’s description includes terms like “beautiful gentleman,” Stevenson categorizes Hyde’s anger as a “flame” and “ape like.” Hyde does not kill Carew as a human kills a human. Instead, Hyde “clubbed” his victim while also “trampling him underfoot” — all these descriptions classify Hyde as an animal, or a caveman. These descriptions of cavemenlike physicality sit firmly inside physiognomic taxonomies. Physiognomy categorized the cavemanish broad, long forehead and bulbous nose as criminal and, therefore, morally degenerate. Hyde’s animalism and unrefined violence marks him as criminal. Those characteristics of Hyde’s violent acts are in keeping with his “unrefined” Szanter 42 physiognomy. This brand of unrefined violence, and the close proximity between Stevenson’s publication and the Ripper’s first murder, prompted claims that Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde inspired the Ripper murders. Stevenson’s novella did inspire plays and musicals. For instance, an 1888 stage adaptation of the story was so convincing that “some even suspected Mansfield himself of being the Ripper” (Storey 5859). Mansfield’s Grand Guignol portrayal of Hyde’s murder shocked audiences, who blamed Mansfield’s believable “transformation” from Jekyll to Hyde for legitimizing the claim that the Ripper was of the gentlemanly class. Audiences were so 12 repulsed by Mansfield that “the run of the play was cut short and terminated in its tenth week” (Storey 58). The Ripper’s unknown identity sparked rumors and gossip that slowly moved the Ripper from the human to the subhuman. The dehumanization of the Ripper gave the public a sense of security in their humanity. While Stevenson “created one of the archetypes of doubling,” readers distanced the human Jekyll from the subhuman Hyde and looked to his monstrosity for clarification. Attempting to understand monstrosity, newspapers and broadsides transformed the Ripper into a monstrous caricature of a man. Newspaper titles assert that London had fallen “under the spell of a great terror . . . a nameless reprobate — half beast, half man . . . a ghoullike creature who stalks through the streets of London . . . simply drunk with blood” (Flanders 427). The frequency at which newspapers, pamphlets, and broadsides published and distributed crimecentric material “implies a readership interested in historical crimes and executions and steeped in the knowledge of violent death” (O’Brien 52). Coupled with this 12 The Lyceum theatre staged Mansfield’s production of Jekyll and Hyde . The gore of this production aligns more closely with those staged at the Grand Guignol in Paris — a theatre famous for its naturalistic horror spectacles. However, the Grand Guignol did not stage an early version of Jekyll and Hyde as the theatre did not open until 1897. Szanter 43 knowledge, blurred “divisions between the dangerous masses and the respectable classes” manifested themselves in the resurrection of monsters; these monsters, like Hyde, could provide the public with answers to unknowns they believed threatened their safety (O’Brien 46). The dehumanization of violent criminals increased until only the other, the monstrous, remained. By imagining criminals like Jack the Ripper as “bloodthirsty fiend[s],” Victorian readers facilitated the rise of monster literature in the 1890s as man and monster could not be one in the same — at least, not without the presence of the supernatural. A man, however criminal or physically repulsive, is still a man and can be a threat to one’s safety; monsters exist only in books and fairytales. Monsters can never truly harm you as they do not exist. The late Victorian spike in monster literature is preceded by an historical tendency to transmogrify human killers into “coldblooded monster[s]” (O’Brien 62). This transition between human and inhuman marks the same transition between real threat and unreal threat. With particular types of monsters such as the vampire, what was once human is no longer possessed of a soul or human conscience. Therefore, he or she can no longer be held to the same moral or ethical standards. Physicality problematizes the distance between human and monster. Though no longer truly human, a vampire maintains many physical similarities with the humans he or she hunts. These texts grapple with the idea that a being, however normal looking, could be capable of committing violent crime. Victorian taxonomies lacked the ability to address monsters who did not appear monstrous, something that Bram Stoker’s Dracula examines in more detail. Szanter 44 Dracula Stoker’s Dracula presents audiences with monsters that can look like humans because they used to be humans. Flanders explores in detail similarities between the Ripper murders and the plot of Dracula. In her final chapter, she points out, “while Dracula is about much more than Rippertype murderer, the 1888 crimes, and the sensations that surround them, are woven throughout the novel” (Flanders 454). The parallels between Dracula and the Whitechapel murders would have been recognizable to Victorian readers who, as O’Brien claims, were “interested in historical crimes” (52). These similarities aided Jack the Ripper’s removal from the human category. It is easier to imagine that a monster is capable of cold blooded murder than to imagine someone with a soul could be capable of it. Stoker describes Dracula and his crimes through “eyewitness” accounts — not from him or any of his vampiric children. The air of normalcy used by the novel’s narrators gave readers a chance to encounter violent, monstrous crime through those that would have understood the everyman’s horror. As a villain, Dracula makes logical sense; the novel introduces him as the central antagonist. Far more problematic is the transformation of Lucy Westenra from upstanding Victorian woman to monster. In a scene narrated by Dr. Seward, the Crew of Light finds Lucy attacking a small child. Having ripped open the young child’s throat and consumed his blood, Lucy “flung to the ground, callous as a devil, the child that up to now she had clutched strenuously to her breast, growling over it as a dog growls over a bone” (Stoker 226). Stoker’s use of words like “callous,” “devil,” and “growl” accentuate her missing humanity by associating her physical being and behavior to animals and demons, not humans. Lucy’s animalistic, devilish behavior reflects her dehumanization. Lucy is now a “devil,” a demon, that must be stopped Szanter 45 before she claims more victims. Her attack on this child illustrates a monstrous mother construction that directly challenges any vestiges of Victorian “womanness” and further dehumanizes her. Dr. Seward emphasizes the “coldbloodedness in the act” and describes her face as “crimson with fresh blood” that “stained the purity of her lawn deathrobe,” or burial gown (Stoker 227, 226). Her death robe, a relic of her formerly pure human state, has been stained by her victim’s blood. This staining marks her transition from human to animal and completes the dehumanization process. Lucy is no longer Lucy; she is a creature “that bore her shape” but is no longer reflective of her formerly human, feminine state (Stoker 226). The text chronicles Lucy’s transformation in a way that makes logical sense. Her human person was corrupted by something foreign and other. In this corruption, she can no longer maintain the moral, ethical behaviors expected of a human. Thus, Stoker suggests that a murderer of this cruelty could just linger inside a remnant of humanity Lucy’s transformation is the product of Count Dracula’s violent and criminal nature. Dracula’s othering begins with his Eastern European nationality and segues into his proclivity for violence. Dracula ends the human lives of five women and desperately tries and fails to end Mina Murray’s human life. Towards the end of the story, Dracula “stepped out of the mist” into Mina and Jonathan’s bedroom. She recognizes him immediately based on the myriad descriptions of his “aquiline nose” and “waxen face” (Stoker 305). In his endeavor to have Mina, Dracula’s threat to, “dash [Jonathan’s] brains out before your very eyes” precedes his drinking of Mina’s blood and starts Mina’s transformation into a vampire (Stoker 305). In relaying this experience to Dr. Seward, Mina vocalizes a deepseated fear: “What have I done to deserve such a fate, I who have tried to walk in meekness and righteousness all my days? God pity me! Look Szanter 46 down on a poor soul in worse than mortal peril” (Stoker 306). Mina recognizes the first step of the descent into monstrosity, a fate she describes as “worse than mortal peril.” She has, literally, tasted monstrosity and understands, because of Lucy, what will follow. Victorian readers who “dol[ed] out sympathy to both victims and witnesses,” would have compassion for Mina who represented the path of “meekness and righteousness” that, at this point in the text, has succumbed to the monster (O’Brien 70). Dracula’ s attempt to explain monstrosity as a subhuman condition can mirror the desire to create more monsters that were capable of heightened levels of brutality. Vampires act as a metaphor for criminals and their acts of violence result from their base, animalistic drive for blood and survival. Just as Victorians viewed criminals as subhuman, vampires are subhuman because they are corrupt and deformed. Their criminal acts reflect their absence of moral or ethical standards. They kill because their moral compass is absent and has no power to make them act humanely. The comfort in this idea stems from the outward and apparent monstrosity of vampires. While shaped like humans, their facial features, nails, and behavior are all designed to alert potential victims. As was the case with Jack the Ripper and other Victorian murderers, there was little to protect victims from an educated gentleman. Even Jekyll and Hyde with its implications of internal duality allowed for Jekyll to be a kind upstanding citizen who physically changes his appearance when transforming into threatening Mr. Hyde. Victorian systems of criminal identification were unable to fully classify Hyde because he could transform into Jekyll. These classification systems could not address monsters who could hide their monstrosity in a human form. Wilde’s Dorian Gray plays to this complication by crafting a monster that is, by all appearances, fully human. Szanter 47 The Picture of Dorian Gray Examples of violent behavior in The Picture of Dorian Gray are not nearly as abundant or central as those in Dracula or Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Dorian’s actions result in negative effects for those that encounter or facilitate his hedonistic behavior. However, most of those results are not violent; rather than brutality, Dorian destroys the reputations of upper class people but does not murder them in cold blood. While the Victorians might have seen his destruction of those individuals’ reputations as a “criminal” act, there is no physical violence against them. The glaring exception to this example is Dorian’s murder of Basil Hallward. Dorian’s beautiful appearance gives him an unfair advantage when luring in potential victims. Unmarred because of the portrait’s absorption of his deformities, Dorian embodies “these years of uncertainty and fear, the sense that no one was what he seemed, that everyone might have a secret life” (Flanders 455). Wilde crafted a narrative that tapped into this wealth of fear. The nature of Dorian’s criminality is most obviously marked by his violent murder and disposal of Basil Hallward — the man who facilitated Dorian’s transition from harmless young man to murderer. Upon revealing his grotesque soulportrait to Hallward, Dorian experiences “the mad passions of a hunted animal” and made him loathe Hallward “more than in his whole life he had ever loathed anything” (Wilde 132). Upon locating a knife, Dorian pierces Hallward’s throat in “the great vein behind the ear, crushing [Hallward’s] head down on the table, and stabbing again and again” (Wilde 132). Compounding the violent and personal nature of this murder is Dorian’s behavior after it is committed. After Hallward’s body stops moving, Dorian notices, “the thing was still seated in the chair, straining over the table with a bowed head, and Szanter 48 humped back, and long fantastic arms” (Wilde 133). While the text illustrates that Hallward’s humanity, his soul, has left the body, Dorian’s reference to the corpse as “the thing” works as a slap in the reader’s face. Rather than being a dead human being, Dorian’s words demotes Hallward to an object. While the corpse is devoid of a soul, the dead body is not corrupt. Compared to the corrupted state of Lucy Westenra in Dracula, her dead body is never corrupted. Instead, the body is buried reverently wearing the “deathrobe” as a symbol of her former human purity. Hallward body, though no longer possessed of a soul, still represents his former humanity. Dorian’s objectification of his corpse insults the remaining humanness of his still uncorrupted body. Adding insult to injury, as Hallward lies lifeless and Dorian examines the scene with an air of disinterest, a “policeman strolled over and said something” to a woman on the nearby crosswalk completely unaware of Dorian’s crime (Wilde 133). Dorian’s walks away from this murder with relative ease; he lies to Francis telling him that Hallward “stayed till eleven, and then he went away to catch his train” to Paris (Wilde 134). Removing Hallward from the country enables Dorian to walk away unsuspected. All he needed to do to get away was tell a lie and hide Hallward’s coat and bag. Dorian was able to cleanse himself of his crime with simple word of mouth and never faced punishment for Hallward’s gruesome murder. The most pivotal connection between Dorian and Jack the Ripper is that neither was brought to justice for their crimes. While “chapbooks, lurid exhibitions and the gutter press caused a wider clamour [sic] for an insight into the crimes,” Jack the Ripper was never caught or made to answer for his murders (Storey 57). Similarly, Dorian Gray is never caught for the murder of Basil Hallward. In the closing pages of the text, Dorian debates whether or not he should “give himself up and be put to death” (Wilde 182). During this internal debate, Dorian Szanter 49 laughs because “everything belonging to [Hallward] had been destroyed. [Dorian] himself had burned what had been belowstairs” and this lack of evidence would only prove Dorian was “mad” for believing he had committed such a violent crime (Wilde 18283). This moment of acceptance is undercut because Dorian cannot understand that his crime was sinful. He thinks about the crime and realizes “nothing that he could do would cleanse him till he had told his own sin” but that “the death of Basil Hallward seemed very little to him” (Wilde 183). In a moment where Dorian could redeem himself, he regresses into the same disinterest he displayed toward Hallward immediately after the murder. The only significant thought he has about the murder is whether or not it was “to dog him all his life” (Wilde 183). Ultimately deciding to destroy the portrait, and thereby himself, Dorian dies “with a knife in his heart” but left no evidence of his crime against Hallward. Though there is justice in Dorian’s metaphorical suicide, those who discover him find no evidence of Hallward’s murder. As was the case with Jekyll and Hyde and Dracula , Dorian Gray presents a monster that is deeply evil but possess qualities that are discernibly human. These texts and their monsters assert the idea that people need to come to terms with the fact that the taxonomies in place to identify criminality were largely useless. Depictions of criminality in high Victorian monster literature explored the motives and psyche of the violent criminal. Whereas museums and “murder sightseeing” put the general public on the front lines of criminal violence, monsters provided a comfortable distance from the potential reality for human monstrosity. Creatures like Mr. Hyde and Dracula suggest that only those who are inwardly and outwardly corrupted are capable of violent crime. Pseudosciences like physiognomy and phrenology legitimized these views by illustrating a criminal appearance that potential victims could use to avoid those who looked criminal. Complicating these desires, Szanter 50 characters like Dr. Jekyll and Dorian Gray presented an unrecognizable threat that cracked the foundations of Victorian beliefs regarding appearance and morality. When taxonomies designed to prevent violent crime prove useless in the real world, these texts grappled with the idea that anyone could be capable of brutality. Szanter 51 Chapter 5: Conclusion Anxiety about physical normalcy weaves together the relationship between the inner and outer selves. Examining anxieties about appearance in the Victorian era, reveals the degree to which they were attached to taxonomies that corroborated their personal beliefs about appearance and moral character. These taxonomies allowed the public to believe they had control over their safety from threats of moral corruption, disease, and crime. Intensifying these anxieties is an everchanging landscape of scientific and medical inquiry that brought much needed answers to questions of deformity and disease. Advancements in medical technology allowed scientists and the public the opportunity to look at the smallest elements of humanity and scrutinize them. Understanding disease at a molecular level challenged existing taxonomies of the diseased as morally and physically inferior. Instead of blaming porphyria or manicdepression on moral deficiency, scientists revealed that complications of biology prevented a human from living a normal life. These challenges to physical stereotypes blurred the lines between preconceived notions of how goodness or badness manifested in human beings. It was faith in these physical stereotypes that allowed Victorian culture to deal with crime and victimization. It is because of Dracula’s monstrous appearance that his victims can recognize him through mist, darkness, and disorientation. In contrast, Dorian’s beauty allows him the leeway to strike victims without their knowing. These examples of appearance and criminality reveal the spectrum of anxiety associated with Victorian crime. While much of this anxiety stemmed from sensationalized killers like Jack the Ripper, murder and other violent crime Szanter 52 became a mainstay of Victorian culture and led to a rise in questions about what it meant to be a criminal. Transforming criminality into monstrousness, these texts explore how certain people are predisposed to criminality based on their physical or moral inferiority. But, again, taxonomies designed to identify these dangerous criminals failed and undermined the validity of classifications in regards to those who appeared criminal. While all of these texts represent clear subversions of existing taxonomies, all texts also include a conquest over the evil, subversive monster. In all texts, the monster figure dies either by their own or another’s hand. It is important to note that, regardless of how deviant their monstrosities are, they are ultimately conquered. This conquest is important to understand why it was acceptable that these monsters subverted their traditional taxonomic categories. This conquest allows for a hopeful narrative because it means that humans can overcome the failure of their categories, recognize evil, and still find ways to defeat it. Or, at the very least, develop better, more useful categories. For the monsters that dispatched themselves, the texts make it so their monstrosity cannot exist in the narrative any longer. The Crew of Light kills both Dracula and Lucy, Jekyll overcomes Hyde, and Dorian overcomes himself. Even though these three monsters appear in varying and unexpected ways, their monstrosities are not sustainable because they all exist outside established categorizing systems. Szanter 53 Works Cited Anwer, Megha. "Murder in Black and White: Victorian Crime Scenes and the Ripper Photographs." Victorian Studies 56.3 (2014): 43341. JSTOR . Web. 5 Apr. 2015. Bachman. 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Ed. Michael Patrick Gillespie. 2nd ed. New York: Norton, 2007. Print. Wittkower, Rudolph. "Marvels in the East: A Study in the History of Monsters." Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 5 (1942): 15997. JSTOR . Web. 11 Mar. 2015. Wolman, Benjamin B. “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: A New Theory of the ManicDepressive Disorder.” Long Island U and the Institute of Applied Psychoanalysis Division of Psychology, New York City, NY. 16 May 1965. Division Presentation. Web. 7 July 2014. |
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