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Masculinity and the Trials of Modern Fiction. By Marco Wan [Abingdon: Routledge, 2017. 177 pp. Hardback £110.00. ISBN 978-1-13-868419-5.]

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 March 2018

Ian Ward*
Affiliation:
Newcastle University

Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge Law Journal and Contributors 2018 

As “law and literature” scholarship has progressed over the last decade or so, so has it diversified. Scholars engaged in this work have taken to adding another “and” or two. Marco Wan does precisely this in his Masculinity and the Trials of Modern Fiction. At a more focused level it is a study of law, literature and gender. But then again it is a little more focused still. For it is really a study of law, literature and masculinity. And it is set historically too, in the writing of a particular literary genre at a particular moment in time. The genre is Anglo-French. The moment is the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; according to Wan it was “one of the most repressive in literary history”.

The book commences with a useful introduction, which identifies two key “questions”; a first of gender, more specifically the construction of sexual identity; and a second of interpretation, the extent to which a text might somehow be said to represent the view of an author, or indeed the author him or herself. Wan then provides the reader with a broader cultural overview of England and France at the turn of the century, discussing a range of contested, often conflicting, perceptions of masculinity and literature. Here Wan suggests a critical dichotomy between the “domestic” perception in England, shaped by an overarching responsibility to provide for the marital home, and a “martial” perception in France, which focused on public manliness and sexual virility.

The remainder of the book comprises five literary “trials”, some more familiar perhaps than others. The first is amongst the more familiar: Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary (1856). In 1857 Flaubert and his publishers were charged with having committed an “outrage against public and religious morals”. The subsequent trial is renowned for the exchange between prosecuting and defence counsel. Critically Flaubert's counsel, Jules Senard, deployed a didactic defence, arguing that Madame Bovary might be read as a cautionary moral tale. As such he presented his client as a realist rather than an imaginative or “impressionist” author. The text, Senard suggested, had no existence independent of the society which it sought to engage and inform, nor indeed the literary genre within which it was founded. Wan calls this the “inter-textuality” argument. Most importantly, of course, it succeeded. And it established a precedent, as can be seen in the second of Wan's chosen trials: that of Paul Bonnetain's 1883 novel Charlot s'amuse. Threatened with a similar charge, Bonnetain's defence was similarly didactic. The novel, which focused on the frustrations of a compulsive masturbator, was written to educate not titillate. Much furthermore was made of its apparently faithful adherence to the insights of medical science, in the hope of reinforcing its realist credentials. And again it succeeded, notwithstanding the passage of a new Act in France in 1881 which was intended to encourage the rigorous prosecution of writings which “outraged public decency”.

At this point Wan's focus, for the third of his literary “trials”, shifts from Paris to London. In 1888 Henry Vizetelly was prosecuted under the provisions of the 1857 Obscene Publications Act 1857 (20 & 21 Vict. c. 83) for the translated publication of three novels written by Émile Zola. Here again Wan focuses on the particular strategies deployed by respective defence counsel. On this occasion, Vizetelly's lawyers preferred the canonical and didactic defence ventured by Senard in Flaubert's trial, whilst eschewing the kind of scientific rhetoric used by Bonnetain's lawyers. But it did not this time work, and the reason is jurisdiction. The prosecution focused on precedent discovered in the common law, and the court was unpersuaded by counter-arguments derived from literary practice. Accordingly the thought remains that if Vizetelly had been prosecuted in France the result might have been different. The most telling of the precedents used against Vizetelly was R. v Hicklin (1868) L.R. 3 Q.B. 360 in which Cockburn C.J. had given a famously opaque judgment in which he ventured that the appropriate test in such a case might be whether a given text had a “tendency to corrupt and deprave”. Opaque or not, Vizetelly's lawyers did not even bother to challenge the authority of the Hicklin test. The consequence is intriguing. It was not the writing of Émile Zola that led to Vizetelly's demise. It was the jurisprudential canon of Lord Cockburn.

The fourth of the trials which Wan discusses is perhaps the most familiar, that of Oscar Wilde. Wilde's case is of course different for a variety of reasons. Most obviously he was not prosecuted, directly at least, for anything he wrote. Following the collapse of his libel action against the Marquess of Queensberry, Wilde was prosecuted for having engaged in “acts of gross indecency” contrary to the so-called Labouchere amendment of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885. What he wrote and published was relevant, but only insofar as it might be deemed representative of him and his presumed sexual proclivities. It was possible in the respective trials of Flaubert, Bonnetain and Vizetelly to separate the accused from the work. It might have been possible in Wilde's case too. But neither Wilde nor his prosecutors preferred the distinction. The prosecution led by Sir Edward Carson lingered long over selected passages in Wilde's writings. And Wilde, in turn, was happy to play the role that Carson offered. Law and literature scholars often like to suppose that trials are places of high drama. But rarely has the suggestion seemed more credible than in the trial of Oscar Wilde. Each side craved the theatricality of the moment. The note that the Marquess famously left at Wilde's club, which accused him of “posing” as a sodomite, assumes here a peculiar resonance. Wilde made little attempt to disclaim his sexuality, and he rarely eschewed the opportunity to strike a pose, inside the courtroom and out.

The final of the trials which Wan examines is that of the author Radclyffe Hall and her publisher Jonathan Cape. The text in question was The Well of Loneliness (1928). There are certain similarities between the Hall and Wilde trials. The most obvious perhaps is the sexual context. Wilde's trial was, in Wan's words, a “turning point” in the history of homosexuality. Hall's trial represents much the same in the history of lesbian sexuality. And in both cases, the prosecution was determined to show that the lives they led, as much as the words they wrote, represented a threat to the morality of impressionable lives. But perhaps the most striking similarity is the way in which the texts of law and those of art strove to define homosexual and lesbian sexuality differently. There is, however, something critically different which Wan is keen to draw out. Against the kind of theatricality which Wilde embraced, Hall was determined to present lesbianism, in her novel, as something more authentic. London, Hall urges at one point in her novel, is full of people who live as her protagonists live. Wilde never claimed that London was full of people who lived their lives as he lived his; quite the reverse. Hall, in comparison to Wilde, was not inclined to strike poses.

A review can only provide a glimpse of a book. And Masculinity and the Trials of Modern Literature is a rich book, providing a series of fascinating and provocative insights which range easily back and forth across disciplines and intellectual perspectives. The structure, based on the five particular trials, is entirely effective, the narrative progression, from Flaubert to Hall, from the later eighteenth to the early nineteenth century, from Paris to London, is compelling. Selections of essays sometimes stand on their own feet as nothing other. Sometimes, however, a collection can add up to rather more than the sum of its parts. Masculinity and the Trials of Modern Literature does the latter. The individual studies of the trials craft a rather larger narrative which guides the reader through a critical and defining period in the shaping of modern sexuality. And it is of course a shaping which continues today, and is vital not least because it remains so contested. It is perhaps appropriate to close with Wan's opening supposition: that his text should be read didactically. It is, as noted earlier, a defining aspiration of so much law and literature scholarship. There is an enormous amount to be learned from reading his book.