as if the waters had but newly retired from the face of the earth: The Flood in Victorian Fiction

Author: Jones Darryl  

Publisher: Oxford University Press

ISSN: 0269-1205

Source: Literature and Theology, Vol.26, Iss.4, 2012-12, pp. : 439-458

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Abstract

Conventional intellectual history posits a paradigm shift in 1859, with the publication of On the Origin of Species. Darwins great work troubledand, for many, completely overturnedtraditional Christian teleology, completing the work done by generations of earlier geologists (Hutton, Cuvier, Lyell), whose formulation of geological deep time posited a world vastly older than Biblical creationism had imagined. Things are not that simple, though, and apocalyptic images, not always shorn of their theological overtones, persist throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, combining and assimilating the allegedly disparate or even incompatible world-views of science and theology: the two cultures have always coexisted comfortably within the capacious form of the novel, modernitys representative cultural medium. This article will focus in particular on the representation of flooding in 19th-century fiction, with close analyses of major novels by the two most important Victorian novelists: Charles Dickens Bleak House and George Eliots The Mill on the Floss. The idea of the flood united both scientific and theological concerns for the Victorians, concerns that, sometimes overtly, but more often obliquely, find their ways into the periods fiction.