First Books: The Necromantics

Poster for First Books Talk

Event Date

Location
Zoom (advance registration required)

First Books: The Necromantics

Date: Wednesday October 4, 2023

Time: 6:00 PM - 7:00 PM

Location: Zoom (advance registration required)

Professor Renée Fox (University of California, Santa Cruz)
The Necromantics
Wednesday, October 4 at 6 p.m.
Zoom registration required: sign up here

About The Necromantics: Reanimation, the Historical Imagination, and Victorian British and Irish Literature

The Necromantics dwells on the literal afterlives of history. Reading the reanimated corpses—monstrous, metaphorical, and occasionally electrified—that Mary Shelley, Robert Browning, Charles Dickens, W. B. Yeats, Bram Stoker, and others bring to life, Renée Fox argues that these undead figures embody the present’s desire to remake the past in its own image. Fox positions “necromantic literature” at a nineteenth-century intersection between sentimental historiography, medical electricity, imperial gothic monsters, and the Irish Literary Revival, contending that these unghostly bodies resist critical assumptions about the always-haunting power of history.

By considering Irish Revival texts within the broader scope of nineteenth-century necromantic works, The Necromantics challenges Victorian studies’ tendency to merge Irish and English national traditions into a single British whole, as well as Irish studies’ postcolonial efforts to cordon off a distinct Irish canon. Fox thus forges new connections between conflicting political, formal, and historical traditions. In doing so, she proposes necromantic literature as a model for a contemporary reparative reading practice that can reanimate nineteenth-century texts with new aesthetic affinities, demonstrating that any effective act of reading will always be an effort of reanimation.

 

BIES’s First Books series hosts virtual sessions with the authors of new academic monographs. Please join us to hear about these extraordinary books as well as the stages of creation and development that brought them into print. 

Poster for First Books Talk