This article explores the role of the telegraph as an instrument of global communication in mid-to-late Victorian fiction. Although frequently mentioned in novels, the telegraph is rarely central to the narrative but often plays a semantically resonant function in the articulation of Victorian mimesis. Apart from conventional and popular 'telegraphic fiction', only a few major writers specifically valorized the telegraph as a cultural object and explored its semantic complexity in relation to literature, language, imagination, and social class, most notably Anthony Trollope in the short story "The Telegraph Girl" (1882) and Henry James in the novella "In the Cage" (1898). Both narratives share a focus on the telegraph as a primarily female professional domain, exploring gender roles and social class, though Trollope places greater emphasis on the sociological implications of context and motifs. His story dramatizes gender roles, female emancipation, and the struggle to keep pace with technological advancement in its professional—and hence social—repercussions. It engages with the entwinement between the marriage plot and the evolutionary drama that characterizes many late Victorian fictions, where the telegraph office functions as an arena of survival. James's "In the Cage," through its topological symbolism, foregrounds the crucial role of the telegraph in the reconfiguration of social and communicative spatialities in which the private/public divide is doubly questioned. The "cage" stages imagination, gender roles, and desire across social classes and power imbalances in a drama of interpretation that is already modernist in its concerns with social power, language, and knowledge. In Bram Stoker's Dracula, the Victorian telegraph network plays a crucial role in the plot as a symbol—or synecdoche—of British and Western civilization. The conclusion argues that the telegraph had been included in the collective illusion of the innocence of the machine but ultimately offered only unfulfilled promises in its failed romance of connectivity, representing yet another facet of the prismatic relationship between science, technology, and the cultures of communication that evolved to unprecedented importance in the twentieth century.
“Wings of Wire”. The (Failed) Romance of the Telegraph and English Fiction
Gefter Wondrich, Roberta
2025-01-01
Abstract
This article explores the role of the telegraph as an instrument of global communication in mid-to-late Victorian fiction. Although frequently mentioned in novels, the telegraph is rarely central to the narrative but often plays a semantically resonant function in the articulation of Victorian mimesis. Apart from conventional and popular 'telegraphic fiction', only a few major writers specifically valorized the telegraph as a cultural object and explored its semantic complexity in relation to literature, language, imagination, and social class, most notably Anthony Trollope in the short story "The Telegraph Girl" (1882) and Henry James in the novella "In the Cage" (1898). Both narratives share a focus on the telegraph as a primarily female professional domain, exploring gender roles and social class, though Trollope places greater emphasis on the sociological implications of context and motifs. His story dramatizes gender roles, female emancipation, and the struggle to keep pace with technological advancement in its professional—and hence social—repercussions. It engages with the entwinement between the marriage plot and the evolutionary drama that characterizes many late Victorian fictions, where the telegraph office functions as an arena of survival. James's "In the Cage," through its topological symbolism, foregrounds the crucial role of the telegraph in the reconfiguration of social and communicative spatialities in which the private/public divide is doubly questioned. The "cage" stages imagination, gender roles, and desire across social classes and power imbalances in a drama of interpretation that is already modernist in its concerns with social power, language, and knowledge. In Bram Stoker's Dracula, the Victorian telegraph network plays a crucial role in the plot as a symbol—or synecdoche—of British and Western civilization. The conclusion argues that the telegraph had been included in the collective illusion of the innocence of the machine but ultimately offered only unfulfilled promises in its failed romance of connectivity, representing yet another facet of the prismatic relationship between science, technology, and the cultures of communication that evolved to unprecedented importance in the twentieth century.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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