The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.
'This paper sets out to examine in what ways recent neo-Victorian fiction illustrates twenty-first-century fiction’s quest for new novelistic possibilities. On the basis of David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas (2004), Andrea Levy’s The Long Song (2010), Michel Faber’s The Crimson Petal and the White (2002) and Rosie Garland’s The Palace of Curiosities (2013), it will be argued that neo-Victorianism broadens the scope of postmodernism by conceiving a cosmopoetics in which a referential and an aesthetic globalisation are combined, by imagining alternative forms of fictional historiography, by challenging various forms of orthodoxy and by questioning the limits of the human. Although it suggests evolutions and variations in relation to late twentieth-century historiographic metafiction, the novel of the new millennium nevertheless cannot be said to forsake postmodernism.' (Publication abstract)