Storytelling and the Figure of the Father in Little Dorrit

Little Dorrit is both a narrative about authority and an examination of the authority of narrative. The novel links vocation with sonhood and storytelling with fatherhood and self-generation. Little Dorrit, however, tells a double story, of a daughter as well as of a son. If the son’s story relates...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sadoff, Dianne F. (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Cambridge University Press 1980
In: PMLA
Year: 1980, Volume: 95, Issue: 2, Pages: 234-245
Further subjects:B Girard, René (1923-2015)
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Summary:Little Dorrit is both a narrative about authority and an examination of the authority of narrative. The novel links vocation with sonhood and storytelling with fatherhood and self-generation. Little Dorrit, however, tells a double story, of a daughter as well as of a son. If the son’s story relates the search to replace the father and to discover paternal authority, the daughter’s story details the horrors and consolations of incestuous desire and generational collapse. Storytelling that seeks the father as origin reveals paternal deception and inauthenticity; incestuous structures of desire attempt to collapse genealogy on the hero and heroine, making paternal origin unknowable and creating an overdetermined narrative ending. Dickens’ double story, then, identifies yet questions genealogy and the patriarchal family as metaphors for narrative structure.
ISSN:1938-1530
Contains:Enthalten in: Modern Language Association of America, PMLA
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.2307/462018