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Greening the Desire with Plants in Frances Hodgson Burnett’s "The Secret Garden"
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Written in the Edwardian period, Burnett’s The Secret Garden (1911) portrays the regenerative dialogue of a ten-year-old girl, Mary Lennox, with plants in a secret garden. Born to a well-off family of British origins in colonial India, Mary is sent to live with her uncle-in-law, Archibald Craven, in England upon the loss of her parents due to the outbreak of cholera pandemic. As a child denied parental love, Mary suffers from feelings of detachment; however, her discovery of/by the secret in England leads to a series of psychophysical changes in her, transforming her egocentric and spoilt nature into a self of awakened empathy and desire. In the space she weaves out of plants in the secret garden, she substitutes for the lack of mother, revives her desire to persist, and helps her orphaned cousin, Colin, as well, to restore a sense of psychic-physical coherence: entering the solipsistic universe of Colin locked behind the doors, she introduces him to the secret garden and the flower seeds they enthusiastically plant there signal the simultaneous planting of health and joy in their hearts. Taking the secret garden which Mary and Colin dare confronting as a metaphor for the repressed nonhuman dimension of life, this essay argues that in a fashion countering the idea of horizontal progression embedded in traditional bildungsroman and thereby contesting the Cartesian idea of human self-containedness, the relation between the orphans and the flower plants they tend in the secret garden draws a literary portrait of therapeutic human-nonhuman plant interaction. Drawing on Roszak’s notion of ecological unconscious, the essay discusses the orphans’ psychic-bodily wounds as stemming from their separation from nature, which takes in the novel either the shape of rose trees, snowdrops, or daffodils on the path of awakening them to their nonhuman potential.
Universidad de Alcala
Title: Greening the Desire with Plants in Frances Hodgson Burnett’s "The Secret Garden"
Description:
Written in the Edwardian period, Burnett’s The Secret Garden (1911) portrays the regenerative dialogue of a ten-year-old girl, Mary Lennox, with plants in a secret garden.
Born to a well-off family of British origins in colonial India, Mary is sent to live with her uncle-in-law, Archibald Craven, in England upon the loss of her parents due to the outbreak of cholera pandemic.
As a child denied parental love, Mary suffers from feelings of detachment; however, her discovery of/by the secret in England leads to a series of psychophysical changes in her, transforming her egocentric and spoilt nature into a self of awakened empathy and desire.
In the space she weaves out of plants in the secret garden, she substitutes for the lack of mother, revives her desire to persist, and helps her orphaned cousin, Colin, as well, to restore a sense of psychic-physical coherence: entering the solipsistic universe of Colin locked behind the doors, she introduces him to the secret garden and the flower seeds they enthusiastically plant there signal the simultaneous planting of health and joy in their hearts.
Taking the secret garden which Mary and Colin dare confronting as a metaphor for the repressed nonhuman dimension of life, this essay argues that in a fashion countering the idea of horizontal progression embedded in traditional bildungsroman and thereby contesting the Cartesian idea of human self-containedness, the relation between the orphans and the flower plants they tend in the secret garden draws a literary portrait of therapeutic human-nonhuman plant interaction.
Drawing on Roszak’s notion of ecological unconscious, the essay discusses the orphans’ psychic-bodily wounds as stemming from their separation from nature, which takes in the novel either the shape of rose trees, snowdrops, or daffodils on the path of awakening them to their nonhuman potential.
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