Title:
1Snowed Up Who is the Author?
- Feminine Desire vs.
- Patriarchal and Class Relations
2Outline--Snowed Up
- General Introduction
- Questions
- Author (1) The Snow its Influences on the
Others and Edith - Author (2) Characters in Binary Opposition --
The Issues of Class - Patriarchal Control
- Author (3) Ediths Position and Desire
- Author (4) Historical Backgrounds
- Summary
- Reference
3Richard Jefferies (1848-1887)
- Hard to categorize, he is an essayist (on natural
history, rural life and agriculture in late
Victorian England), a novelist (with futuristic
fantasy After London) and a childrens book
classic, Bevis . - After London (1885) a futuristic England in
barbarism with only a few outposts of
civilization remaining. London in poisonous
swamps much of southern England is covered by a
large lake some city states along the shores
ruled by petty tyrants and their corrupt courts. - Having a short life--38 years, he died in penury.
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Image and info
4Snowed Up
- The story was sent to London Society once for
publication but was rejected. Â - The manuscript was probably purchased by Sir
Hugh Walpole at Sothebys, or from a bookseller,
during 1920 or early 1930s. It has, since
Walpoles generous donation, remained in the
Walpoles collection at Kings school. - With inconsistencies and gapsreasons unknown
(intended or due to health)
5Snowed Up
- Who is the author, the snow, Edie, Richard
Jeffries or ? What gets "snowed up" in the
story? - What are the binary opposites in the story? Â
- Edies subject position
- How is Edie related to the men around her?
- What do you think about the ending? Is Edie
finally subject to both the control of her
society and the belittling of her author?Â
6Author I The Snow -- Disturbing Social Hierarch
and Testing Humanity
- The Characters Views,
- its Influences and Implications
7The Minor Characters The Helpless and Helpful
- 1) Lord B rich aristocrat
- 1/5 -- courting E. with his "poor shivering
ancient body the snow as his best friend to
imprison him with her (22) half silly with
fright (23) - 1/14 completely helpless
- 2) Papa, cynicalpoor landed gentry
- 1/5 a judgment on human venture to the North Pole
- 3) Mr. Thrigg the newly rich
- 1/5 -- "I shall perish with an angel! Not
good at using metaphors - 1/6 in despair, afraid of losing his business
regret how he could have made a fortune - 1/14 helping in the kitchen (23-24) Theres
some good in him. - Buried in snow (24)
8The Other People Physical Force vs. Courage
- Mostly helpless
- 1/14 -- All the servants left but the maid,
- papa an invalid, Bilberton helpless
- Thrigg trapped in snow
- 1/17 -- Papa and the Alderman may die.Â
- Brutal Force and Basic Survival
- 1/14 -- the arrival of Phillip and his brutal
threat (25) - 1/15 -- eat the cat (the gentlemen dined on my
Persian cat.) - Courage Philip is the only one active to get
food. - 1/18 the last try by Phillip 1/19Â a feast The
Alderman eats a long time. (27)
9Edie's changing views of the snow and the others
- 1) Pleasure 1/3 snow like death "Why it is
beautiful! I wish I was snowballing Aurelles."
(21) fun (22) - 2) Discomfort but Still Able to Laugh? No Fun
- 1/4 nothing to do hate the snow (21)
- 1/5 - 6, laughs at her suitors. Â
- 1/10 "we shall be starved."Â Misses "Phillip."Â
--a very short entry. - turning point 1/14Â "Nothing but snow."Â
"Such fun! The Alderman has been helping me in
the kitchen."Â ? no laughing matter ? Thrigg
buried in snow? Philip arrives he is willing to
rescue Thrigg only if he gives up his pursuit of
Edie. Edie changes her tactics. p. 26
10Edie's changing views of the snow and the others
(2)
- Â 3) Writing to Survive, Submit to the Larger
Forces - 1/15 must write to pass away the time (26)
- Edie's weakness and incisive comment on the
"weakness of the snow" 1/17 cries - comments on the snow. "the weak, feeble
despised flakes of snow. - 1/18 waiting
- turning point 1/19Â he has all my heart
11Edie's changing views of the snow and the others
(3)
- 3) Submit herself to the Larger Forces
- 1/22 the roughs invasion nice to have a soldier
around. - Hope for us at last--fog.Â
- 1/15Â Is aware of her being a commodity between
two men. Will be a good girl and make Phil a
first rate wife. - 4) Failure of her Language
- Gaps appear when the snow becomes a serious
matter (22) on 1/14 when they use up the coal
and are afraid - As quiet as a dormouse (28)
- The end of her diary/female subjectivity.
- 5) More to analyze the dashes.
12Snow Meanings?
- Snow Natural or Social Forces?
- Social --Romantic beauty, fun, used in
courting. - Natural -- effects of global warming as a
consequence of industrialism the story as an
apocalyptic allegory - Natural ?Social -- the physical and brutal,
the most powerful, next to which is economic
(Thrigg), the patriarchal (father) and political
power (Bilberton) - weak
- Question the physical-brutal, sexual and
military (gun) courage (25, 26, 28) - courage is beyond banknotes in value.
13Author (2) Characters in Binary Opposites Their
Social Meanings
- class and appearance (pp. 20-21)
- --gt Aurelles' playing chess -- "trying oh, so
hard to play chess--which he does not
understand--with papa and all just because."Â - father's position landed gentry, in financial
trouble, to be saved only by being appointed by
the government.
Lord Bilberton political power "wizened" Mr. Alderman Thrigg money stout
Philip Aurelles "strong, tall, noble-looking no social grace Somebody (p. 21)
14Patriarchal Order and Ediths Position
- The fathers desire
- play chess with me as the queen (20)
- to be an ambassador, to save his estate, to keep
the family name (20-21) - The suitors come to the point with her father,
not with her. - Edie like a shuttlecock or tennis ball (p. 20)
15Author (3) Edie in between these men and in
Social Order
- She prefers Aurelles over the other two suitors,
though she is aware of the former's clumsiness in
social games. - reflected in her terms of address--gt Aurelles or
Phillip or Phil (p. 20) Lord Bilberton cannot
call him Charlie, such an old thing - Rebellious, she is not to be sold. (20)
- find them laughable (20)
- (22) I wont, no I wont
- order vs. Edie's giddy head (p. 20)
- She is self-contradictory (20, 21)
- not aware of her real desires (for somebody)
16Ediths Desires
- Unnamed or Vague Desires
- Luxury and fun at remote places
- Go to Nice (20)
- pp. 21-22 run away with "Philip or somebody
(21) - Romantic/sexual love tired of someboby be loved
forever. - Power of Language Will be a poetess someday(20)
laugh at Thriggs language 21
- Contradictions
- Fur jacket (with money from Thrigg) penniless
soldier That was just what I wanted. - If the guardsmen would only manage to be rich
but Im not to be sold exactly. - Freudian slips? Â
- p. 20 Thrigg, who I believe has been lending
paper (papa) money, and now I think of it - snowball Aurelles (21) ?
17Author (4) Historical Backgrounds
- Jeffries tries to get Disraelis endorsement
wins public attention through becoming an
authority on agricultural economy (though he is
not really equipped with the knowledge).
(textbook p. 33) - Expresses anti-Darwinism and theories of social
degeneration (in the tradition of Hardy, Wells,
Forster and WoolfLawrence, too). (34) - around 1870s national pride and fears
- 1875??,??????,????????Suez Canal ????
????????(Disraeli)???? - the absent presence of national anxieties in
1870's over the wars, the end of protected
market which opened Britain to the import of
foreign goods, over whether the nation can still
dominate the world market
18Snowed Up Contradictions Embodied in Phillip
and Edie
- Although Jeffries writes a cautionary take about
what happens when society is deprived of
technological support (e.g. transportation),
there also appears to be an unarticulated desire
for such a catastrophe to occur, a desire for
devastation and for subversion. - He expresses liberal anxiety but also a
reactionary 'back to nature' impulse. (Meynard
139) - Back to social patriarchal order
19Summary Theoretical Issues
- Authors -- Factors influencing/forming our
personalities - Childhood (development of sexuality, Oedipus
complex, incest taboo) - repression and re-channeling of desire
(reactionary symptoms, neurosis, psychosis,
sublimation, need-demand-desire) ? Unstable and
insatiable desire - Entry into the Imaginary order and then the
Symbolic order - Sense of lack and splitting of identity
20References
- Maynard, Jessica. A Marxist Reading of 'Snowed
Up. Literary theories a case study in
critical performance. Eds. Julian Wolfreys and
William Baker.  London Macmillan Press Ltd ,
1996