Abstract

This essay explores Anthony Trollope’s decision to identify Phineas Finn, of his various “Palliser Novels,” as Irish. Many Victorian readers questioned Phineas’s ethnicity and lack of stereotypically Irish characteristics, and Trollope himself renounced this decision in his autobiography. The character’s Irishness, however, seems to be more than a gimm ick to differentiate the novel from similar tales of aspiring members of Parliament; in Phineas Finn, the author uses ethnicity to invert the national marriage trope. Trollope employs gendered ethnic stereotypes, casting his title character as feminine in his romantic entanglements and even his political behavior, while the English ladies he meets are described as masculine. But the character of Phineas emerges as more complicated than a feminine or emasculated one; in his tenuous loyalty to his docile Irish sweetheart, Phineas becomes a conventional male lead. His Irishness, then, lends a duality to his character that encompasses more than merely two national identities; it embodies two entirely different kinds of men: one masculine and the other feminine, one a philanderer and the other loyal, one English and the other Irish.

Highlights

  • Phineas Finn is widely regarded as one of Anthony Trol- Whether Trollope intended to suggest that the entire novel lope’s most popular works

  • Magazine between 1867 and 1868, the novel satirizes the member of Parliament ought to have been English, re

  • It is possible that he mentions this title character, an Irish pícaro, who experiences a number opinion to spark interest in an earlier novel towards the of ups and downs over the course of a tumultuous political end of his career

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Summary

Introduction

Phineas Finn is widely regarded as one of Anthony Trol- Whether Trollope intended to suggest that the entire novel lope’s most popular works. Irishness as inherent to his character and to the plot of the Representation Of Phineas Finn: Anthony Trollope’s novel, others consider it secondary, even accidental.

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