Illegitimacy and Laws in Wilkie Collins’s The Woman in White and No Name

Author:

ÖZTEKİN Sercan1

Affiliation:

1. KOCAELI UNIVERSITY

Abstract

Victorian sensation novels, in addition to their scandalous topics such as fraud, murder, adultery, bigamy, and madness, refer to Victorian laws and their construction by social and cultural standards. As a significant sensation novelist, one of the most important subjects Wilkie Collins calls for attention is illegitimacy, a social, political, and literary topic he recurrently employs in his fiction. In his novels The Woman in White (1860) and No Name (1862), he dwells on this issue, motivating the characters’ crimes and scandalous acts. In both novels, illegitimate characters act illegally to reconstruct their identities by challenging Victorian norms especially about illegitimacy. Concerning his life and his critique of Victorian laws and moral certitudes, this paper explores how Wilkie Collins employs and questions the theme of illegitimacy about crime, sensations, and social and legal problems that influence illegitimate children. After briefly examining illegitimacy and laws about it in Victorian England, it explores how the concept of illegitimacy is shaped and influenced by Victorian conventions and gender ideologies in the two novels.

Publisher

Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, Cankaya University

Reference15 articles.

1. Bartley, P. (2000). Prostitution: Prevention and Reform in England, 1860-1914. Routledge.

2. Blain, V. (1986). Introduction to No Name, Oxford University Press, pp. xii-xxi.

3. Brantlinger, P. (2011). Class and Race in Sensation Fiction. In P. K. Gilbert (ed.), A Companion to Sensation Fiction (pp. 430-441). Blackwell Publishing.

4. Cox, J. (2004). Representations of Illegitimacy in Wilkie Collins’s Early Novels. Philological Quarterly 83 (2), pp. 147-169.

5. Collins, W. (1994). The Woman in White. Penguin Books. (Original work published in 1860)

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