"I'm Too Broken to Belong:" Subverting the Victorian Nuclear Family through the Concept of Family of Choice in The Irregulars (2021) Cover Image

"I'm Too Broken to Belong:" Subverting the Victorian Nuclear Family through the Concept of Family of Choice in The Irregulars (2021)
"I'm Too Broken to Belong:" Subverting the Victorian Nuclear Family through the Concept of Family of Choice in The Irregulars (2021)

Author(s): Dina Pedro
Subject(s): Fine Arts / Performing Arts, Cultural history, 19th Century, Film / Cinema / Cinematography, British Literature
Published by: Editura Casa Cărții de Știință
Keywords: Neo-Victorianism; dysfunctional families; family of choice; subverting gender conventions; Otherness;

Summary/Abstract: Family occupies a central position in (neo-)Victorian fiction. Yet, the ideal nuclear family myth is often contested, since this institution tends to be portrayed as dysfunctional, broken and oppressive. By contrast, alternative reconfigurations of the heteronormative household in neo-Victorianism encourage an empathic and tolerant engagement to both Victorian and contemporary eccentric family models. The Netflix original series The Irregulars (2021) follows this pattern by placing a gang of Othered outcasts rejected by their families at the centre of the narrative. In this article, I analyse how the series subverts the traditional conceptualization of the Victorian family and proposes, instead, an alternative concept of community: the neo-Victorian family of choice.

  • Issue Year: 12/2022
  • Issue No: 12
  • Page Range: 106-118
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English