1. Crisis in Relations: Psychic Wounds, Fantasy, and the Construction of Family.- 2. Emily and Charlotte Brontë – Childhood Passions and Pathologies: Wuthering Heights and Shirley.- 3. Charles Dickens – Lost Children and ‘Primal Scenes’: ‘the ‘autobiographical fragment’, Dombey and Son,and Great Expectations.- 4. Wilkie Collins – Inheritance and the Vampiric: No Name and Armadale.- 5. Elizabeth Gaskell and George Eliot – Mourning and Elegy: North and South and The Mill on the Floss.
Dr. Madeleine Wood worked as a Lecturer in nineteenth-century literature until 2016, holding posts at Brunel University, UK, King’s College London, UK, and Queen Mary University of London, UK. Building on her enduring interest in the clinical and therapeutic, she then retrained as a social worker. Madeleine now works for the NSPCC as a Practitioner, supporting children and young people through trauma-informed approaches.
‘Madeleine Wood’s study of cross-generational trauma in mid-nineteenth-century fiction is both provocative and persuasive in offering fresh new readings of canonical texts. Her focus on the ‘afterwardsness’ curve of repetition, as fictional parents transmit their own traumas to their children, shocks us into deeper understanding of family secrets and their lasting reverberations.’
- Valerie Sanders, Professor of English, University of Hull, UK
This book produces an original argument about the emergence of ‘trauma’ in the nineteenth-century through new readings of Dickens, Emily and Charlotte Bronte, Collins, Gaskell and Elliot. Madeleine Wood argues that the mid-Victorian novels present their protagonists in a state of damage, provoked and defined by the conditions of the mid-century family: the cross-generational relationship is presented as formative and traumatising. By presenting family relationships as decisive for our psychological state as well as our social identity, the Victorian authors pushed beyond the contemporary scientific models available to them. Madeleine Wood analyses the literary and historical conditions of the mid-century period that led to this new literary emphasis, and which paved the way for the emergence of psychoanalysis in Vienna at the fin de siècle. Analysing a series of theoretical texts, Madeleine Wood shows that psychoanalysis shares the mid-Victorian concern with the unequal relationship between adult and child, focusing her reading through Freud’s early writings and Jean Laplanche’s ‘general theory of seduction’.