Unstable Bodies: Victorian Representations of Sexuality and MaternityManchester University Press, 1995 - Всего страниц: 280 Jill Matus uses bio-medical, social scientific and literary texts to interrogate Victorian concepts of sexual difference. Departing from the usual critical focus on Victorian conceptions of the sexes as incommensurably different, she emphasises the powerful effects in Victorian culture of notions of sexual instability and approximation. While ideas about mutable or ambiguous sexuality provoked fear and fascination, they also served Victorian middle-class ideology by offering 'scientific' ways of constructing racial, class and national identity in terms of the body. Throughout this period fierce public debates raged around prostitution, infanticide, working-class sexuality, female reproduction and domesticity. Drawing on works by Elizabeth Gaskell, George Eliot and the Brontes, Matus explores the dialogue between literary and other discourses of sexuality. Unstable bodies will be an essential reference work for students and scholars working in Victorian literary and cultural studies, feminist studies, and the history of sexuality. |
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... response which she designates as equally natural – the recoil of ' human nature ' from oppressive burdens . The ... responses also applies to her situation , though it is made more complex through George Eliot's focus on Hetty's limited ...
... response which she designates as equally natural – the recoil of ' human nature ' from oppressive burdens . The ... responses also applies to her situation , though it is made more complex through George Eliot's focus on Hetty's limited ...
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... response to Maudsley argues on this basis : why should any organ or set of organs require exceptional attention ? If women can continue to eat beef and bread with as much benefit as men even though they are marked by special ...
... response to Maudsley argues on this basis : why should any organ or set of organs require exceptional attention ? If women can continue to eat beef and bread with as much benefit as men even though they are marked by special ...
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... response to ideological and cultural constraints . But if George Eliot pre - dates Breuer and Freud because her attention is not focused on sexual issues alone , her emphasis on the wider social issues that constrain and frustrate self ...
... response to ideological and cultural constraints . But if George Eliot pre - dates Breuer and Freud because her attention is not focused on sexual issues alone , her emphasis on the wider social issues that constrain and frustrate self ...
Содержание
Acknowledgements page | 1 |
Chapter one Sexual slippage and approximation | 21 |
Chapter three Confession secrecy and exhibition | 89 |
Авторские права | |
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Unstable Bodies: Victorian Representations of Sexuality and Maternity Jill L. Matus Ограниченный просмотр - 1995 |
Unstable Bodies: Victorian Representations of Sexuality and Maternity Jill L. Matus Просмотр фрагмента - 1995 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Acton Adam Bede Agnes Grey animal Anne Brontë argued associated attention Audley baby baby-farming beauty behaviour biological body Braddon Casaubon Charlotte Brontë child Cleopatra closet constructions cultural debates discussion Diseases of Women domestic Dorothea Elizabeth Gaskell emotional emphasises Esther explores factory feelings female desire female sexuality feminine feminist fiction flowers Functions and Disorders Gaskell Gaskell's gender George Eliot girls governess Greg Hetty Hetty's human human sexuality hysteria hysterical ideological infant infanticide insanity instability Jemima labour Lady Audley's Secret Laycock London Lucy madness Madonna male Manchester marriage Mary Barton maternal instinct Maudsley menstruation middle-class Middlemarch moral mother motherhood narrative narrator nature nineteenth-century notion nursing painting passion passionlessness political prostitution question reader representation represented reproductive response Review Rosalie Routledge Ruth Ruth's Saint Teresa Science sensation novel sexual difference social suggests texts University Press Victorian Villette W. R. Greg Weston wet-nurse woman working-class young