Article

Zola in Ghostland: Spiritualist Literary Criticism and Naturalist Supernaturalism

Details

Citation

Ferguson C (2010) Zola in Ghostland: Spiritualist Literary Criticism and Naturalist Supernaturalism. SEL Studies in English Literature, 50 (4), pp. 877-894. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/404724/summary

Abstract
This article traces the attempts of Victorian spiritualist critics and novelists to reform the ghost story along naturalist lines, a move that demonstrates the hitherto neglected affinity between spiritualism’s and naturalism’s modes of theorizing human agency. The praise for the new French realism in British spiritualist journals such as Light, I argue, represents the movement’s enduring kinship with the theories of biodeterminism and of authorship as impersonal experimentation espoused by Émile Zola in Le Roman Expérimental. This affinity allows us to recognize fin-desiècle spiritualist fiction, not as a subgenre of the Gothic, but as a radical form of experimental realism.

Journal
SEL Studies in English Literature: Volume 50, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date31/10/2010
PublisherJohns Hopkins University Press
Publisher URLhttps://muse.jhu.edu/article/404724/summary
ISSN0039-3657
eISSN1522-9270

People (1)

Professor Christine Ferguson

Professor Christine Ferguson

Professor in English, English Studies