Sleep Fictions: A Digital Companion

KingSlept

In the parable “While the King Slept,” a woman usurps patriarchal power by doing what the men are too tired to do. In the story, a king is presented with a series of problems within the kingdom but he refuses to take action and complains: “I am tired of looking at these things, and tired of hearing about them.” Wearied by his empire’s countless problems, the king falls into a prolonged slumber. His queen, meanwhile, takes his place, alleviates every problem, and doubles the kingdom’s prosperity.

A similar scenario occurs in the Forerunner's Volume II serialized novella Moving the Mountain.* The narrator, John Robertson, is a scholar of ancient languages. During a trip through the Himalayas, John suffers a fall and loses his memory. He is shaken from his thirty-year stupor only after his sister Nellie recognizes him while visiting Tibet. Upon returning to his native United States, John is shocked by the nation’s immense social and technological changes. In the time that the amnesiac John meandered a foreign land for thirty years, the women of his homeland “woke up. . . . And being awake, they . . . saw their duty and they did it” (78). In hearing of the great changes that took place in his absence, John reflects that “It was as if I had slept, and, in my sleep, they had stolen my world” (29).

Gilman’s novella was heavily influenced by Edward Bellamy’s 1888 utopian novel Looking Backward: 2000-1887,** as well as H.G. Wells’ 1910 novel The Sleeper Awakes.*** In both tales, the narrators are given improper doses of a sleep aid to treat their insomnia. As a result, they sleep for a vast amount of time and wake up to a future society completely unknown to them. During the time that passes between John’s accident and his “awakening,” he functions as if he is a sleep-walker. In this way, John’s thirty-year stupor resembles the drugged, sleeping states of the protagonists in Bellamy and Wells’ preceding works. Thus, modern men, as Gilman imagines them, suffer from a mismanagement and poor understanding of sleep—a weakness that could very well enable women to wake up and dismantle the patriarchal structures of society.

*Permalinks: 
Wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Moving_the_Mountain_(novel)&oldid=956712949
Internet Archive https://archive.org/download/movingmountain00gilmgoog/

**Permalinks:
Wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Looking_Backward&oldid=1023074420
Internet Archive https://archive.org/download/cu31924086489261/

***Permalinks: 
Wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Sleeper_Awakes&oldid=1026030727
Internet Archive https://archive.org/download/sleeperawakes00welluoft/

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