『크리스타벨』과 타자의 애도 윤리학Christabel and Ethics of Mourning for the Other
- Other Titles
- Christabel and Ethics of Mourning for the Other
- Authors
- 윤일환
- Issue Date
- Dec-2021
- Publisher
- 한국영어영문학회
- Keywords
- S. T. Coleridge; Christabel; Ethics of Mourning; Dialectic of Desire; Alterity
- Citation
- 영어영문학, v.67, no.4, pp 769 - 791
- Pages
- 23
- Indexed
- KCI
- Journal Title
- 영어영문학
- Volume
- 67
- Number
- 4
- Start Page
- 769
- End Page
- 791
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/140129
- DOI
- 10.15794/jell.2021.67.4.011
- ISSN
- 1016-2283
2465-8545
- Abstract
- This essay discusses the complex interplay of desires between Christabel, Geraldine, and Leoline from the perspective of an ethics of mourning. After hearing her mother’s will from the monk, Christabel is dominated by the desire which must take place within her mother’s will. In her unconscious, the site where her banished desires have gathered and intensified, Christabel figures Geraldine as the double of her lover and mother. She attempts to fulfill her own desire, which cannot be done without replacing and betraying her mother. Geraldine can acquire power only by vanquishing the mother and assuming her prerogatives. After recognizing the true nature of Geraldine, Christabel gradually moves beyond the horizon of guilt into affirming the irreplaceability and alterity of her deceased mother in mourning. On the other hand, the spiritually and physically ineffectual Leoline orders the matin bell to be tolled in a measured way, and instates a law in order to ascertain everyone in remembrance of her death. By excluding the meanings of mourning other than the ones he imposes, he fetishizes his dead wife as an object of “custom and law,” and prevents any transformative interaction with her. Later enthralled with Geraldine, Leoline quickly abandons Christabel in her mute anguish, and takes up Geraldine as his new lady. When his feverish excitement about Geraldine reawakens his friendship with Sir Roland, her putative father, Leoline replaces his mourning for his dead mother with the recovery of his friendship with Sir Roland, thus doubly refusing to ethically engage with his dead wife.
- Files in This Item
-
- Appears in
Collections - 서울 인문과학대학 > 서울 영어영문학과 > 1. Journal Articles

Items in ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.