Image for Personation Plots: Identity Fraud in Victorian Sensation Fiction

Personation Plots: Identity Fraud in Victorian Sensation Fiction

Part of the Suny Series, Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century series
See all formats and editions

The first full-length study of identity fraud in literature, Personation Plots argues that concerns about identity and the body gripped the Victorian consciousness.

The mid-nineteenth century was marked by extensive medico-legal efforts to understand the body as the sole signifier of identity.

The sensation genre, which enjoyed remarkable popularity in the 1860s and 1870s, at once reflected and challenged this discourse.

In their frequent representations of identity fraud, sensation writers demonstrated that the body could never guarantee a person's identity.

The body is malleable and untrustworthy, and the identity it is supposed to signify is governed by the caprices of the human mind and the growing authority of paper matter.

Both a wide-ranging literary analysis and a portrait of the age, Personation Plots reads canonical texts by Wilkie Collins, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, and Charles Dickens alongside several lesser-known sensation novels.

The study, which anticipates debates over biometric identification practices in our own time, also features brief criminal biographies of two of the nineteenth century's greatest impostors, Alice Grey and Mary Jane Furneaux, and concludes with an afterword on imposture in the late-Victorian Gothic, and anticipates debates over biometric identification practices in our own time.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£34.95
Product Details
SUNY Press
1438490852 / 9781438490854
eBook (EPUB)
01/11/2022
English
266 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%