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CMP#36  The "Dead Silence"

4/7/2021

2 Comments

 
Picture
Clutching My Pearls is about Jane Austen and the times she lived in. Click here for the first in the series. 

The "Dead Silence"
PictureFanny, Lady Bertram and Edmund bid Sir Thomas farewell on his journey to Antigua, 1983 adaptation
  ​In my last post, I ventured the opinion that Mansfield Park is not about slavery, despite the fact that it’s about a slave-owning family. Now, let's look at the passage in Mansfield Park which is “Exhibit A” in any discussion of Austen and abolition, the “dead silence” passage. It’s a crucial passage for many an essay, lecture, blog and vlog about Austen and Mansfield Park. However, many of these discussions misinterpret what is being described in this passage.
    It's a conversation between Fanny Price and her cousin Edmund Bertram (whom she secretly loves). They discuss his father, her uncle, Sir Thomas, after his return from a lengthy journey to Antigua.

     Fanny tells Edmund "I love to hear my uncle talk of the West Indies. I could listen to him for an hour together." Edmund tells her, "Your uncle thinks you very pretty.” Fanny turns away in embarrassment, and modern readers are cringing as well. Eeuw, an uncle notices that his young niece has filled out nicely while he’s been away and mentions it to his son. Austen makes it clear that Fanny’s discomfort also arises out of hearing Edmund praise her face and figure. “’Oh! don’t talk so, don’t talk so,’ cried Fanny, distressed by more feelings than he was aware of.” ...

     Edmund sees she is embarrassed; he stops talking about her countenance and her figure: “Your uncle is disposed to be pleased with you in every respect; and I only wish you would talk to him more. You are one of those who are too silent in the evening circle.”
   “But I do talk to him more than I used. I am sure I do.” [answers Fanny] “Did not you hear me ask him about the slave-trade last night?”
   “I did—and was in hopes the question would be followed up by others. It would have pleased your uncle to be inquired of farther.”
   “And I longed to do it—but there was such a dead silence! And while my cousins were sitting by without speaking a word, or seeming at all interested in the subject, I did not like—I thought it would appear as if I wanted to set myself off at their expense, by shewing a curiosity and pleasure in his information which he must wish his own daughters to feel.”
    This reminds Edmund of something perceptive that Mary Crawford said, and away he goes, talking about Mary Crawford and so much for the slave trade, or any explanation of what Fanny's question was, or what in Sir Thomas’s answer gave Fanny pleasure, or what she longed to ask her uncle as a follow-up question.
PictureA windmill grinding sugar cane in Antigua
   Here is what this passage describes: The entire family was sitting, as they always did, in the parlour in the evening. Fanny asked her uncle a question about the slave trade. He answered, that is, he gave her some “information.” His answer was followed by a dead silence in the room. Fanny “longed” to ask a follow-up question. Edmund perceived that Sir Thomas would have been “pleased” if she had.
        Fanny held herself back, although she "longed to" ask more, because no-one else showed  “curiosity” or “pleasure” in the “information” which Sir Thomas gave. She did not want anyone to think that she thought herself wiser, or better, or more dutiful, or more interested in social issues, or the family business, than his own daughters.
       That short exchange  -- that’s it. An opinion about the slave trade is not expressed. 
     Here it is again, in condensed form:
  1. Fanny asks a question about the slave trade.
  2. Sir Thomas answers.
  3. Dead silence – no-one else in the room said anything.
  4. Because of her retiring personality and her take on Bertram family dynamics, Fanny doesn't ask any more questions.
       The “dead silence” is the silence of the Bertram family, most particularly Maria and Julia.
    However, if you look around the world of literary criticism for commentary on the “dead silence,” you discover many, perhaps the majority, start with the mistaken premise that the “dead silence” refers to an embarrassed silence on the part of Sir Thomas. There are news articles and books and journal articles and textbooks and study guides and podcasts and videos and tweets and theses repeating the error that Fanny’s question was met with dead silence:
     Here’s a collection of quotes erroneously claiming that it was Sir Thomas who was silent (it's quite lengthy and I keep adding to it, so you can just scroll down):

  • "When [Edward Said's] Culture and Imperialism was published in 1993, the chapter on Jane Austen's Mansfield Park aroused anger among some critics, because of his discussion of the "dead silence" (Austen's phrase) that occurs when its heroine, Fanny Price, asks her uncle about the slave trade."
  • "It is necessary to the purpose of assessing Said’s legacy to briefly consider how critics have contested his reading of the “dead silence,” which follows Fanny’s question about slavery to Sir Thomas..."
  • “This failure of Mansfield Park according to critics such as Ghosh, Said, and Spivak, becomes obvious when Fanny's question about Sir Thomas' business in Antigua goes unanswered.”
  • ​“[Edward] Said quotes the line about Fanny’s inquiry into the slave trade being met with a dead silence…”
  • “We certainly know that those who raise difficult topics in Jane Austen’s fiction often receive muted replies, as when Fanny Price observes that her inquiry of her uncle about the slave trade in the West Indies was met by ‘a dead silence’”
  • "Fanny asks Sir Thomas at one stage about the slave trade but her question is answered with a dead silence." 
  • "In chapter 21, when Sir Thomas returns from his estates in Antigua, Fanny asks him about the slave trade but receives no answer."
  • “On his return Fanny asks him about the slave trade, but her question is met with “dead silence” around the dinner table.”
  • Sir Thomas’s “dead silence” following Fanny’s question about the slave trade may well have been caused by a bad conscience over bills of sale. Fanny’s question was not really the voice of prophetic challenge, as we shall see, but may have felt so to her uncle.
  • “Fanny mentions to Edmund that she asked her uncle, Sir Thomas, about the slave trade, which was met with “dead silence””
  • "It is against this background that Austen decided to have Fanny's question to Sir Thomas on the slave trade answered by that now infamous 'dead silence.'"
  • "This silence mirrors the silence that Fanny meets when she questions Sir Thomas about the slave trade."
  • "The slave trade was then a delicate topic, hence the ‘dead silence’ that followed Fanny’s question to Sir Thomas Bertram in MP."
  • “At one point in Jane Austen's Mansfield Park, the upright Fanny Price speaks to her uncle Sir Thomas Bertram... Following the question, Austen writes, ‘there was such a dead silence!’”
  • “In the novel, when Fanny Price asks Sir Thomas about his involvement with the slave trade over dinner her question is met by ''such a dead silence'' that the subject is awkwardly dropped.”
  • "Fanny's question about the slave trade irrupts into the after-dinner conversation to be greeted with "'dead silence,'" but it articulates the fact that the lifeblood of the Bertrams' finances is siphoned from the blood of the enslaved."
  • "[I]n Mansfield Park the silence which greets Fanny's question about slavery in Antigua, brings into play a web of connections between British power overseas and the sustenance of landed gentry in England."
  • Two unanswered questions resonate through Mansfield Park. The first occurs, famously, when Fanny asks her uncle Sir Thomas about the slave trade and the results are ”such a dead silence” that she proceeds no further.” The second occurs when… Fanny has recourse to the East Room to decide whether or not she should act in Lovers Vows…
  • ”when Fanny's question to Sir Thomas about the slave trade is met with "such a dead silence"”
  • “While the characters in Austen's novel readily banter on a variety of trivial topics, the heroine Fanny Price meets ''dead silence” when she queries her uncle about the slave trade.”
  • “In an emblematic episode in the novel, Fanny Price asks her uncle Bertram, who has just returned from his plantation in Antigua, about the slave trade, only to be met with 'a dead silence'"
  • “When one of the female characters, Fanny Price, asked Sir Thomas about the slave trade and slave labour, all she got was silence: 'There was such a dead silence.'"
  • “Despite Sir Thomas’s silence on the matter, the success of his slave plantations determines the quality of life and the sustenance of the next generation of Bertrams at Mansfield Park.”
  • Take the "silence" that inspired many an academic work: A moment in Mansfield Park, when heroine Fanny Price questions her uncle about the slave trade and is met with "dead silence." For many years, that moment was viewed by some critics as complicity. 
  • Fanny Price recounts she asked [Sir Thomas] "about the slave trade" and received in reply "a dead silence."
  • "Sir Thomas, with first-hand knowledge of both the Parliamentary debate and the conduct of the slave trade in Antigua, was in a perfect position to answer Fanny’s question “‘about the slave trade.’”  Why, then, was her question met by a “‘a dead silence’”?" 
  • "Sir Thomas’s “dead silence” following Fanny’s question about the slave trade may well have been caused by a bad conscience over bills of sale.  Fanny’s question was not really the voice of prophetic challenge, as we shall see, but may have felt so to her uncle."
  • "[W]e catch no hint of discomfort about the dependence of Mansfield Park on slave labor.  The potentially damning implications of Sir Thomas’s dead silence following her question about the slave trade do not occur to the mind that saw so much during the production of Lovers’ Vows.  Had they done so, it seems unlikely she would have told Edmund that she loved to hear her uncle talk, longed to ask more questions, and refrained only out of concern that her bored cousins would be shown up."
  • "Austen decided to have Fanny's question to Sir Thomas on the slave trade greeted by that now ominous 'dead silence.'"
  • "This is seen when Fanny Price raises a question about slavery, and Sir Thomas answers with silence."
  • "When Fanny Price asks Sir Thomas Bertram about the slave-trade on his return from his plantation in Antigua, the 'dead silence' that greets her casts more than a moral shadow across the paternal estate — it calls into question the social and economic basis of life at Mansfield itself."
  • “Fanny gets no reply to her forbidden question because none is possible from a man who has supported the slave trade as a buyer of slaves—lawfully in times past, or even illegally since 1808—and whose own fortunes have depended on it.” 
  • ​“What Jane Austen communicates though the ‘dead silence’ at Mansfield Park is that, at this time, the autumn of 1812, the ‘slave trade’ was still a topic too close to the bone for a plantation-owning family to discuss freely and openly”
  • "When Fanny raises the topic with her uncle, her question is met with a 'dead silence.'"
  • "It is Fanny who thinks to ask Sir Thomas Bertram about the slave trade, although the only response to her question is dead silence"
  • ​Austen decided to have Fanny's question to Sir Thomas on the slave trade greeted by that now infamous "dead silence."
  • "In the novel, for example, Fanny Price, staying at the Bertram estate, which is dependent on Antiguan plantations, asks about slavery, but receives only silence in return." 
  • "Fanny mentions the 'dead silence' of her uncle... when she asks him about the 'slave trade.'"
  • ​"whatever political and colonial critique might have been implied by Fanny’s statement about Sir Thomas’s silence is subordinated to the familial drama of surrogacy and marriage and parenting... 
  • “But in her novel, there is scarcely any kind of disapproval of Sir Thomas' wealth. Fanny asks Sir Thomas at one stage about the slave trade but her question is answered with a dead silence.”
  • “Fanny Price, the central figure in the novel, questions her uncle on his return from the Caribbean about the slave trade and receives no answer. It is obvious that she is horrified by it and her uncle can provide no excuse.”
  • “But when [Fanny] asks the head of the house about the slave trade, he responds with uncomfortable silence.”
  • "When the heroine, Fanny Price, asks her uncle, the family patriarch, about the slave trade, she is met with “‘dead silence!’”
  • “a bit like the ‘dead silence’ that greets Fanny Price’s inquiry about the slave trade in Mansfield Park”
  • "the heroine Fanny Price's outburst about the treatment of slaves and the "dead silence" her question is met with..."
  • Austen’s phrase ‘dead silence’ is a resonant one... Sir Thomas’s silence about the slaves, and indeed that of the whole family, indicates their embarrassment about the role of slavery in their family finances. 
  • "[I]t seems reasonable to infer from the infamous "dead silence" that greets the heroine Fanny Price's inquiries about the slave trade in the novel that the issue was disquietingly "too close to home" for her adopted father... Postcolonial critics of the novel are surely on the right track when they assert that Bertram's enigmatic "dead silence" cannot be divorced from the embarrassing issue of the trade's role in the maintenance of his income."
  • Fraiman similarly argues that when Fanny’s inquiry regarding the slave trade is met with ‘dead silence’, “Austen deliberately invokes the dumbness of Mansfield Park concerning its own barbarity precisely because she means to rebuke it”.
  • “Fanny gets no reply to her forbidden question because none is possible from a man who has supported the slave trade as a buyer of slaves… The gap of ‘silence’ between his slave-owning ‘values’ and those of Fanny, the sole questioner of those ‘values,’ could not be more effectively shown.’
  • "The only exchange we truly find about the slave trade in the text occurs on page 184. Fanny mentions to Edmund that she asked her uncle, Sir Thomas, about the slave trade, which was met with “dead silence” (184). This silence could mean a multitude of things: shame, guilt, ignorance, anger, reluctance, or arrogance, all of which would stem from Sir Thomas being treated as a slave owner in the one place he owns no slaves – Mansfield Park."
  • "Fanny’s question about the slave trade, which was met with “dead silence,” is meant to start her own “rebellion” against her master (Sir Thomas)"
  • "Brian Southam explains that because Sir Thomas is so chatty in other forums about his visit to Antigua and so silent on this occasion, the dead silence indicates the breach of a taboo subject.” ​“Now, the ‘dead silence’ hints that his loquacity may have dried up at the mention of slaves."
  • "In a family gathering shortly after Sir Thomas returns from Antigua, Fanny Price asks her uncle “‘about the slave trade.’”  We learn of her question in a conversation the next day with Edmund, when she says that after she asked the question, “‘there was such a dead silence!’”
  • "​It is significant that Austen’s only mention of the slave trade is in the form of an unanswered question."  
  • "Most critics stop with the observation that Mansfield and Norris are both names connected with slavery, that the estate owned by the Bertrams in Antigua is presumably run on slave labour, and that we’re told that Fanny asks her uncle about “the slave trade.” Most of them seem to feel this is all there is, that the “dead silence” that meets Fanny’s question means that there is, quite simply, nothing else to see, or say." (in the way of allusions to slavery in the novel)
  • "When Fanny asks about slavery in Mansfield Park and she's met with silence... 'yes everything we're sitting on here in this drawing room comes from our Antigua plantations but we don't talk about it.'"
  • ​​"However, this moment is not a ‘silence’ in or on the part of the text but a pointed representation of silence - Sir Thomas’s silence on the subject of slavery. The point is that Fanny problematizes Sir Thomas’s silence. Also of significance here is the issue of how swiftly this pointed representation is displaced by the text. No sooner has the text announced and problematized Sir Thomas’s silence than it rushes to fill this silence — and implicitly rescue Sir Thomas from the critical implications of this silence.”
PictureSylvestra Le Touzel as Fanny in the 1983 mini-series, which is true to the book.
     Again and again we're told Fanny's question was "met with" or "answered with" dead silence. And these scholars and commentators have used this faulty premise – the idea that Sir Thomas didn’t answer Fanny’s question -- to spin off into their analyses of the meaning of Mansfield Park.    
    If I have convinced you that the text says Sir Thomas did answer Fanny, and the "dead silence" refers to his family,
 I take a leaf from Anne Steele in Sense & Sensibility: "I beg you will contradict it, if you ever hear it talked of" when someone says Fanny Price's question was met with silence.  
    Some few scholars and critics 
do understand what is being described in the passage -- they correctly state that Sir Thomas answered Fanny, and then the subject was dropped:


  • "When, for instance, Edmund asks her why she did not continue to question her uncle on his West Indian experiences, she explains that she did not like to show more interest in them than Maria and Julia."
  • "Finally, it falls to Fanny to question Sir Thomas about the slave trade on his return from Antigua, and though we learn from Edmund that his father is eager to be forthcoming, Fanny herself is silenced by the unresponsiveness of the rest of the family."
  • "Fanny explains the silence: Her cousins simply have no interest in their father’s business, and Fanny does not wish to 'set myself off at their expense,' by showing any curiosity about his topics." 
  • ​"To our great irritation now, [Fanny] stays silent instead of quizzing Sir Thomas on slavery and thus showing up the indifference of his daughters."
    Sir Thomas's answer, as one critic says, is "significantly unreported" [by Austen]. Yes, but what does it signify?  Interpretations of the meaning and significance of that exchange vary greatly.​       To be continued.

Previous post:  How daring was Austen?                                                         Next post:  Reading into the [dead] silence
​


In my Mansfield Trilogy, Fanny Price meets some abolitionists and also hears some of the arguments made by those who defended slavery. We also meet the sailors tasked with suppressing the African slave trade. In this respect, I tried the same technique used by Harriet Beecher Stowe in Uncle Tom's Cabin, putting varying opinions into the mouths of the characters. Click here for more about my books.
2 Comments
Phoebe Myers
10/3/2021 07:15:07 am

Good to see that someone has recognised that it is not Sir Thomas who is silent. The other factor which never seems to be mentioned is the relevance of the character of Fanny and her relationship with Sir Thomas. JA describes how Fanny is in awe of him, perhaps a little afraid of him, and very respectful. Given all this is it likely that Fanny would deliberately introduce a subject if she believed Sir Thomas would find it awkward to discuss? Fanny is not stupid - she obviously believes Sir Thomas would be willing to discuss the slave trade (as does Edmund). This suggests to me that his views on it must be more nuanced than a decided support for the slave trade, and perhaps even indicates support for abolition. Also I find it interesting that Henry Crawford later discusses the abuses which he is afraid may happen at his estate in his absence. Can this comment be applied more generally, and therefore have some bearing on the issues in Antigua whilst Sir Thomas is an absentee landlord? It might be a stretch, but is there an implication that in his going to Antigua (Like Henry's proposing to go to his own estate), Sir Thomas's intention is to ensure fairer treatment of the workers?

Reply
Lona Manning
10/3/2021 11:43:10 am

Hi Phoebe, I agree that Sir Thomas would be the kind of guy who would discourse willingly about the slave trade, and the potential for emancipation, and he'd carefully lay out the arguments on both sides. You wonder about whether Austen is implying something with Henry. I have been comparing Austen to writers of her era and asking myself how subtle any of them were in terms of using implication and allusion. Her contemporaries were not subtle at all. If they wanted to make a point, they said so. If Austen was saying apricots=slavery in Mansfield Park, (for example) she was way ahead of her time.
I would love to find a book about the history of the English novel which delineates and points out examples of subtlety and how novelists became more adept at leaving things unsaid. Thanks for your comment!

Reply



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    Greetings! I blog about my research into Jane Austen and her world, plus a few other interests. My earlier posts (prior to June 2017) are about my time as a teacher of ESL in China (just click on "China" in the menu below). More about me here. 


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