Abstract

This essay is a study of the ways in which heterosexuality is disrupted in George Meredith's novel Rhoda Fleming to promote alternative, more fluid expressions of desire. It argues that the heterosexual relationships foregrounded in the text are destabilized, in favour of alternative erotic dynamics imagined at least in part through homoeroticism, submission and masochism, resulting in flexible iterations of both gender identity and sexual orientation. In particular, patterns of eroticized competition and sexual passivity enable displaced male heterosexual attachment to — and through — Rhoda Fleming's three female protagonists. The novel's explorations of non-heteronormative sexuality are articulated through triangulated desire and proliferative doublings, which remain unresolved by the equivocal marriages that draw the novel to a close. This article therefore engages in an expansive queer reading of Meredith's seemingly conventional, fallen-woman narrative of heterosexual courtship and seduction. In doing so, it illustrates that eroticized sexual marginality is deployed by Meredith to subvert dominant ideals about gender and about Victorian heterosexual imperatives.

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