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- O‘zMU xabarlari Вестник НУУз ACTA NUUz FILOLOGIYA 1/5 2023
O‘ZBEKISTON MILLIY
UNIVERSITETI XABARLARI, 2023, [1/5] ISSN 2181-7324 FILOLOGIYA https://science.nuu.uz/ Social sciences O‘zMU xabarlari Вестник НУУз ACTA NUUz FILOLOGIYA 1/5 2023 - 286 - Reusencreutz, a Member of Parliament who pays a great and systematic political effort to prevent women from their right to vote[1]. Fevvers says, “I saw it in the paper only yesterday how he gives the most impressive speech in the House on the subject of Votes for Women. Which he is against. On account of how women are of different soul-substance from men, cut from different bolt of spirit and cloth, and altogether too pure and rarefied to be bothering their pretty little heads with things of this world, such as the Irish question and the Boer War”. Here in this satirical tone, Fevvers highly possibly alludes to the above mentioned W. E. Gladstone. In this quote, the reader can notice how preposterous and antique Carter makes it sound for phrases such as women’s “pretty little heads” or being “cut from different bolt of spirit and cloth” expressions that were ridiculous even in Fevvers’ time[1,38]. These days no public figure could afford to use them without being condemned and despised. Even in Carter’s time they would be unacceptable. Nights at the Circus gently infiltrates in the historical period of the dawn of the 19th century also by alluding to several real historical public figures from the branch of art, politics or science. In the very first scene where Fevvers enthusiastically tells Walser about her European tour, she drops a couple of famous names from art, starting with a British one, Dan Leno, the Victorian music hall comedian: “I love London. London - as dear old Dan Leno calls it, ‘a little village on the Thames of which the principal industries are the music hall and the confidence trick”. The reader can notice how Carter handily links her fictional circus performer Fevvers to the really formerly existing famous trickster Leno to dissolve the divide between the historical and fictional. After mentioning several French names associated with experimental art work, such as the dramatist Alfred Jarry who “proposed marriage”, the renowned painter of prostitutes Henri Toulouse-Lautrec (“not just Lautrec but all impressionists vied to paint her”) or the novelist Sidonie- Gabrielle Colette and her husband Henry Gauthier-Villars known as Willy (“Willy gave her supper and she gave Colette some good advice”) she brings up an indirect reference to Sigmund Freud and his psychoanalysis, alluding to his notorious work with instincts and dreams: “in Vienna, she deformed the dreams of that entire generation who would immediately commit themselves wholeheartedly to psychoanalysis”. In London, Fevvers also gains the interest of the Prince of Wales. Another important element integrating the real political situation of the end of the 19th century into the novel is Lizzie. Although a former prostitute, she is a radical suffragist, a zealous and deliberate fighter for women’s rights, and an “epitome of the English radical tradition”. Compared to Fevvers who openly affects the wide audience Lizzie works secretly, as if from the entrenchment. Her style of work for women’s liberation might be move covert, nonetheless, the more efficient it is. She manipulates Walser to attach some of her letters to the journalistic mail packages he is sending to Britain. Later on, the reader figures out that they are politically oriented news about Russian internal affairs and that she is sending them to Russian dissidents in exile - the very group of politically active people who would eventually commence the Russian Revolution of 1917. Day suggests that the roots of Lizzie’s political views can be traced down to the English radical movement of the 1790s which are connected, among others, with the names of Mary Woolstencraft, a British writer, philosopher and advocate of women’s rights, and her partner, William Godwin, a philosopher, novelist and political journalist. The reader can notice that Lizzie is inspired by these existent personages of women’s suffrage in the scene where Lizzie ponders the group of female guards and convicts who escaped from the Countess P’s sanatorium and who are eager to start a female utopian society in the Siberian taiga. Lizzie cynically wonders whether the boy babies will be fed to female polar bears. Obviously bad-tempered, she is upset with their idea which she probably finds foolish and exaggerated and “clearly thinks herself back in Whitechapel at a meeting of the Godwin and Woolstencraft Debating Society”. As discussed in other chapters, Lizzie is a voice of the common sense and the most foresighted female character. To sum up, however spectacularly fantastic or magical Night at the Circus might seem, it carefully fits in the Download 1.91 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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