Hudson, Kathleen
2019.
“Faking” disability and performing gothic narratives in Matthew Lewis’s The Monk.
Studies in Gothic Fiction
6
(1)
, pp. 7-18.
10.18573/sgf.15
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Abstract
There are very few depictions of physical disability in the early Gothic novels of the late Eighteenth and early Nineteenth Centuries. However, there are several moments in such texts when a faked disability is used in a pseudo-drag performance by an able bodied actor, a kind of negotiation of disabled identity. Such depictions exploit patterns of eighteenth-century masquerade performance to prioritize and problematize physical identity as a space of profound socio-moral and personal destabilization. This phenomenon within the early Gothic in turn aligns the performance of identity with that of Gothic narrative, redefining self-fashioning practices in terms of “otherness.” This article will use Tobin Siebers’s work on disability performance to examine the use of “fake” disability as a means of negotiating Gothic narrative in Matthew Lewis’s 1796 novel The Monk. The Monk distinguished itself as a novel focused both thematically and strategically on the dialectic interpretation of physical performance, on “seeing” and reading identity within a fundamentally unstable universe. Disability masquerade in this text illuminates numerous ambiguities that defined personal, social, and literary identity at this time, and that also influenced later depictions of disability in the developing Gothic mode.
Item Type: | Article |
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Date Type: | Publication |
Status: | Published |
Subjects: | P Language and Literature > PR English literature |
Publisher: | Cardiff University Press |
ISSN: | 2156-2407 |
Date of First Compliant Deposit: | 17 June 2025 |
Date of Acceptance: | 1 May 2018 |
Last Modified: | 24 Jun 2025 08:42 |
URI: | https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/179120 |
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