Both the intertextual relationship between Lovers’ Vows and Mansfield Park, and Patricia Rozema’s cinematic adaptation of Austen’s novel have been the object of intense critical scrutiny. The purpose of this paper is to examine them together as belonging to a hypertextual continuum that stretches from Elizabeth Inchbald’s plays and novels (A Simple Story and Nature and Art) to Rozema’s postmodern filmic pastiche. From this perspective, Austen’s text will no longer be considered as the canonical ‘target-’ or ‘source-text’ against which to evaluate the role of both ‘adaptations’ and ‘predecessors’, but as the centre of a network of transmediatic relationships where meaning and representation undergo successive re-adaptations or ‘re-mediations’ (Bolter) across three centuries as well as across the boundaries between different genres and media. The paper will discuss, in particular, the ways in which the three authors have engaged with generic conventions, social norms, and their ‘sources’ in order to refashion their representation of female characters and gender dynamics. On one hand this approach will shed new light on Austen’s own intertextual practices and the subtle dialectics she establishes with Inchbald by questioning and revising the thematic, ideological, and formal features of different genres, on the other hand it will allow a fresh understanding of the ways in which Rozema’s film re-articulates the contrast between the ‘two heroines’ of Mansfield Park and their relationship to male desire and authority.
Carlotta Farese (2017). Genre Bending at Mansfield Park. The Re-mediation of Austen’s Female Characters Across Novel, Theatre and Film. TEXTUS, XXX(3), 113-128 [10.7370/89354].
Genre Bending at Mansfield Park. The Re-mediation of Austen’s Female Characters Across Novel, Theatre and Film
Carlotta Farese
2017
Abstract
Both the intertextual relationship between Lovers’ Vows and Mansfield Park, and Patricia Rozema’s cinematic adaptation of Austen’s novel have been the object of intense critical scrutiny. The purpose of this paper is to examine them together as belonging to a hypertextual continuum that stretches from Elizabeth Inchbald’s plays and novels (A Simple Story and Nature and Art) to Rozema’s postmodern filmic pastiche. From this perspective, Austen’s text will no longer be considered as the canonical ‘target-’ or ‘source-text’ against which to evaluate the role of both ‘adaptations’ and ‘predecessors’, but as the centre of a network of transmediatic relationships where meaning and representation undergo successive re-adaptations or ‘re-mediations’ (Bolter) across three centuries as well as across the boundaries between different genres and media. The paper will discuss, in particular, the ways in which the three authors have engaged with generic conventions, social norms, and their ‘sources’ in order to refashion their representation of female characters and gender dynamics. On one hand this approach will shed new light on Austen’s own intertextual practices and the subtle dialectics she establishes with Inchbald by questioning and revising the thematic, ideological, and formal features of different genres, on the other hand it will allow a fresh understanding of the ways in which Rozema’s film re-articulates the contrast between the ‘two heroines’ of Mansfield Park and their relationship to male desire and authority.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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