Stories of initiation for the modern age: explorations of textual and theatrical fantasy in Jules Verne’s Voyage à travers l’impossible and Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials
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2009Author
Theodoropoulou, Athanasia
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Abstract
While the theatrical works of Jules Verne have gathered some critical attention
over recent years, the text of the Voyage à travers l’Impossible has remained an obscure
space in the author’s oeuvre or deemed unworthy by Vernian scholars. Jules Verne has
predominantly been seen as a writer of adventure novels whereas the fantastic elements
in his work have commonly been overlooked by critics. This thesis examines the ways in
which the Voyage à travers l’Impossible amalgamates ideas that are representative not
only of the Vernian work in general but also of the pre-freudian spirit of the nineteenth
century. By viewing the play within the context of theatrical fantasy, this thesis opens up
new paths of analysis in the genre. Part of this endeavour consists of a comparison with
a seemingly disparate text: Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials, which, similarly to
Verne’s play, facilitates an exploration of the function of fantasy both in literary and
theatrical terms as it was first adapted for the stage in 2003. During the course of this
thesis I offer an analysis of the trilogy and proceed to cover new ground by comparing
this to an analysis of the adapted text.
For the purpose of my examination I establish a connection between the two texts
by regarding the Voyage à travers l’Impossible and His Dark Materials as dominated by
the literary motif of initiation according to the model introduced by Vernian specialist
Simone Vierne. I subsequently interweave an array of theories on fantasy,
psychoanalysis, topography and the body as part of my analysis of the literary fantastic.
Texts by Sigmund Freud, Jacques Lacan, Tzvetan Todorov, Irène Bessière, Mircea
Eliade, Judith Butler and Vernian critics such as William Butcher are amply used in my
readings of Verne and Pullman before I proceed to examine their relevance to the
theatrical experience of the fantastic.
An analysis of the adaptation of His Dark Materials offers the opportunity for
fresh critical insights by creating new perspectives on the function of fantasy in its
fluctuation from page to stage and vice-versa. It is through these different perspectives
that I revisit old questions and introduce new ones such as the difference between
fantasy and the fantastic, their regressive or progressive character, the modification of
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fantastic elements on the passage from the literary to the theatrical and from
pre-modernism to post-modernism. Basing my analysis on stories of initiation, I suggest
that fantasy evades exclusive association with either progress or regress and only
remains faithful to the notions of passage and blurring of frontiers.