The Maternal Subject in the Budding Britsih Novel: Considering Daniel Defoe's Fiction

Authors

  • Anastasia Vahaviolos Valassis City University of New York (CUNY)

Abstract

This article attempts to create a three-part structure in which it can situate its more particular discussion of maternal subjectivities in the work of Daniel Defoe. In the first part, it looks at the British novel’s relationship to the representation of human subjectivity. It discusses the connection to the nonfictional form of the autobiography as well as to ideologies of individualism. The article argues that representing maternal subjectivity in fiction poses a unique challenge to the British novel’s form: the healthy relationality of the maternal subject is suppressed generically, as narrative requires a dominant character through which to create meaning. The second part looks at Defoe’s three major novels—Robinson Crusoe, Moll Flanders, and Roxana—and how the prefaces instruct the reader about how to receive the scandalous stories about these mother figures. This overview highlights Defoe’s interest in writing the gendered “other” and his difficulty in depicting a subjective relationality in Roxana without novelistic tragedy and narrative collapse. The third part involves a deeper reading of Moll Flanders, in which moments of Moll’s maternal inclinations are read against the larger picture of her denial of maternal obligations. Moll’s is a damaged child’s subjectivity, one that still craves a mother’s care, approval, and affection. The narrative structure requires that she stake a rhetorical claim that excises the subjectivities of others from the story. In concluding, the article argues that it is valuable to read Defoe’s early experiments with the formation of the maternal subjectivity in fiction because they show a sensitive awareness of the factors that enable the composition and transmission of maternal narrative within the genre of the novel.

Author Biography

Anastasia Vahaviolos Valassis, City University of New York (CUNY)

Anastasia Vahaviolos Valassis is a PhD candidate in English lierature at the Graduate Center, CUNY. Her work was published in Morris Dickstein’s edited volume Critical Insights: Robert Frost in 2009. She is currently writing her dissertation, tentatively titled Genre and Transgression: Maternal Subjectivities in the 18th and 19th Century British Novel. The project examines the maternal subject from the British novel’s rise with Daniel Defoe to the domestic fiction of the 1860s with Charlotte Yonge and Margaret Oliphant. Anastasia has taught high school and college literature and composition courses and delights in creative writing. She is currently raising two amazing young children
who continue to both inspire and challenge her work.

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How to Cite

Vahaviolos Valassis, A. (2017). The Maternal Subject in the Budding Britsih Novel: Considering Daniel Defoe’s Fiction. Journal of the Motherhood Initiative for Research and Community Involvement, 7(2). Retrieved from https://jarm.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/jarm/article/view/40361