Wilkie Collins and disability
How the Victorian author’s physical pain and drug dependency fed into his sensational novels. Matthew Sweet is joined by Clare Walker Gore, Tom Shakespeare and Tanvir Bush.
A blind woman who temporarily regains her sight is the heroine of Wilkie Collins’s 1872 novel Poor Miss Finch. Matthew Sweet is joined by Clare Walker Gore, Tom Shakespeare and Tanvir Bush to discuss how Collins’s own poor health led him to write about disability and physical difference in a more nuanced way than many of his contemporaries. Apart from Lucilla Finch, who has more agency when blind than sighted, other examples include the apparently monstrous Miserrimus Dexter ('the new centaur: half-man, half-chair') in The Law and the Lady, and the shockingly moustachioed Marian Halcombe in The Woman in White.
Tanvir Bush is the author of Cull. You can also hear her discussing John Wyndham's novel The Day of the Triffids on Free Thinking.
Clare Walker Gore has contributed to a Free Thinking discussion about Depicting Disability and written essays for Radio 3 about authors including Dinah Mulock Craik and Margaret Oliphant.
Tom Shakespeare is Professor of Disability Research at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. You can hear his Radio 3 essay on Tolkien on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Sounds.
Producer: Torquil MacLeod
Last on
Broadcast
- Thu 5 Jan 2023 22:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3
Featured in...
Prose and Poetry—Free Thinking
Fact, fiction, key authors and contemporary voices from around the world
Discussions and talks from the Free Thinking Festival 2019
Click to listen to discussions, talks and music as the Free Thinking Festival 2019 Gets Emotional
CLICK to LISTEN & SEE programmes from the Free Thinking Festival 2018: The One & the Many
CLICK to LISTEN & SEE all programmes, images, clips & features from 2017's festival
Free Thinking Festival 2017: The Speed of Life