Heading South in Search of Female Development

In this essay, Minjeong Kim examines the ways in which D.H. Lawrence’s 1920 novel The Lost Girl describes its female protagonist Alvina Houghton’s journey to southern Italy. This novel introduces the motif of journey as part of the female Bildungsroman structure. Alvina travels to Pescocalascio, re...

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Main Author: Minjeong Kim
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Aalborg University Open Publishing 2012-08-01
Series:Akademisk Kvarter
Online Access:https://journals.aau.dk/index.php/ak/article/view/3291
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author Minjeong Kim
author_facet Minjeong Kim
author_sort Minjeong Kim
collection DOAJ
description In this essay, Minjeong Kim examines the ways in which D.H. Lawrence’s 1920 novel The Lost Girl describes its female protagonist Alvina Houghton’s journey to southern Italy. This novel introduces the motif of journey as part of the female Bildungsroman structure. Alvina travels to Pescocalascio, repudiating the patriarchal restrictions in her parochial British hometown of Woodhouse and pursuing development outside home. But the colonial fear and anxiety about what lies outside European civilization inform the narrative view of the untrod¬den southern Italian town of Pescocalascio. Where European civilization begins to fade out and sinister primitivism opens its jaw, our female protagonist becomes lost. Hence the representation of Italian primitivism in the novel frustrates Alvina’s pursuit of development, but the foreign landscape and the presence of the colonial Other within Lawrence’s text disrupt the Bildungsroman’s self-contained, teleological structure.
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spelling doaj.art-1041fffcd9e846f7ace7795034c73f392024-04-02T16:15:10ZdanAalborg University Open PublishingAkademisk Kvarter1904-00082012-08-010410.5278/ojs.academicquarter.v0i04.3291Heading South in Search of Female DevelopmentMinjeong Kim In this essay, Minjeong Kim examines the ways in which D.H. Lawrence’s 1920 novel The Lost Girl describes its female protagonist Alvina Houghton’s journey to southern Italy. This novel introduces the motif of journey as part of the female Bildungsroman structure. Alvina travels to Pescocalascio, repudiating the patriarchal restrictions in her parochial British hometown of Woodhouse and pursuing development outside home. But the colonial fear and anxiety about what lies outside European civilization inform the narrative view of the untrod¬den southern Italian town of Pescocalascio. Where European civilization begins to fade out and sinister primitivism opens its jaw, our female protagonist becomes lost. Hence the representation of Italian primitivism in the novel frustrates Alvina’s pursuit of development, but the foreign landscape and the presence of the colonial Other within Lawrence’s text disrupt the Bildungsroman’s self-contained, teleological structure. https://journals.aau.dk/index.php/ak/article/view/3291
spellingShingle Minjeong Kim
Heading South in Search of Female Development
Akademisk Kvarter
title Heading South in Search of Female Development
title_full Heading South in Search of Female Development
title_fullStr Heading South in Search of Female Development
title_full_unstemmed Heading South in Search of Female Development
title_short Heading South in Search of Female Development
title_sort heading south in search of female development
url https://journals.aau.dk/index.php/ak/article/view/3291
work_keys_str_mv AT minjeongkim headingsouthinsearchoffemaledevelopment