Article

'The darkness is the closet in which your lover roosts her heart': Lesbians, desire and the gothic genre

Details

Citation

Parker S (2008) 'The darkness is the closet in which your lover roosts her heart': Lesbians, desire and the gothic genre. Journal of International Women's Studies, 9 (2), pp. 4-19. http://vc.bridgew.edu/jiws/vol9/iss2/2/

Abstract
This paper discusses the use of the Gothic genre in two ‘lesbian’ novels:Nightwoodby Djuna Barnes (1936) andAffinityby Sarah Waters (1999). The Gothic, I argue, is employed and manipulated in order to counter the repressive effects of ‘lesbian panic’, evident in much women’s fiction (an idea posited by Patricia Smith inLesbian Panic, 1997). I begin by constructing a framework for my argument from the disparate yet related scholarship of several theorists, including Terry Castle, Eve Sedgwick, Claude Lévi-Strauss and Gayle Rubin. My argument hinges on the claim that lesbianism threatens cultural order – based upon male homosocial relationships and the reciprocal exchange of women – in a similar way to incest. Therefore, lesbianism is subject to extreme repression, rendered shady and invisible in history and literature. Following this theoretical introduction, I argue that the Gothic genre – that twilight realm of unconscious fantasies and forbidden desires – can be used as a tool for subverting the repressive system that keeps lesbianism in its place, bringing its silence into articulation. Through the self-conscious use of Gothic tropes inNightwoodandAffinity, Djuna Barnes and Sarah Waters write the lesbian back into tangible existence, ‘repossessing’ the spectre of the lesbian towards their own emancipating ends. In particular, the incest taboo and the love triangle are twisted into new shapes in these novels, so that all that Western culture designates as ‘abject’ becomes eerily illuminated by the Gothic’s unflinching perspective. Finally, I discuss the options available when concluding a lesbian novel and the effects of genre on narrative outcome: Is a happy ending possible in a realist lesbian novel? Could the Gothic genre hold the key to unravelling the silence of lesbian panic? My conclusion leaves discussion open to other perspectives, arguments, and, of course, to further scholarship.

Keywords
Gothic; Lesbian literature; Sarah Waters; Djuna Barnes; modernist women's writing; contemporary women's writing; Neo-Victorian literature; psychoanalysis

Journal
Journal of International Women's Studies: Volume 9, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/03/2008
PublisherBridgewater State University
Publisher URLhttp://vc.bridgew.edu/jiws/vol9/iss2/2/
ISSN1539-8706