![]() History, form and genre are thus not only foregrounded but utilised as modes of being and saying differently: the Neo-Victorian genre enables this saying differently, at the same time as providing vicarious readerly engagement in that other world. Through the correlation of literary form and content, this chapter addresses how each text explores the contemporary moment for women writers, alongside the historical act of women’s displacement from literary history. Both narratives are correlated with the traumas of patriarchy (the ghost, sexual abuse, mental illness) and bear witness to what Kohlke and Gutleben have characterized as ‘fill a lacuna rather than seiz an already occupied space of enunciation’ (2010, 7). Sarah Waters’ Affinity (1999) and Michèle Roberts’ In the Red Kitchen (1990) represent a radicalised historical fiction, encompassing fragmented multivoicedness and signifying the postmodern experimentalism of Neo-Victorianism. ![]()
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