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Michael Field's Revisionary Poetics
  • Language: en

Michael Field's Revisionary Poetics

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2025-02
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Examines history, modernity, gender, and sexuality through the literary innovations of two late-Victorian female co-authors

Women's Literary Collaboration, Queerness, and Late-Victorian Culture
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 234

Women's Literary Collaboration, Queerness, and Late-Victorian Culture

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017-05-15
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  • Publisher: Routledge

The first full-length study to focus exclusively on nineteenth-century British women while examining queer authorship and culture, Jill R. Ehnenn's book is a timely interrogation into the different histories and functions of women's literary partnerships. For Vernon Lee (Violet Paget) and 'Kit' Anstruther-Thomson; Somerville and Ross (Edith Somerville and Violet Martin); Elizabeth Robins and Florence Bell; and Katharine Bradley and Edith Cooper, the couple who wrote under the pseudonym of 'Michael Field', collaborative life and work functioned strategically, as sites of discursive resistance that critique Victorian culture in ways that would be characterized today as feminist, lesbian, and q...

Shakespiritualism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 245

Shakespiritualism

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013-02-27
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  • Publisher: Springer

This study concerns itself with a now-forgotten religious group, Spiritualists, and how their ensuing discussions of Shakespeare's meaning, his writing practices, his possible collaborations, and the supposed purity and/or corruption of his texts anticipated, accompanied, or silhouetted similar debates in Shakespeare Studies.

Queer Popular Culture
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 266

Queer Popular Culture

  • Author(s): T.
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016-02-05
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  • Publisher: Springer

Articles cover many aspects of contemporary culture, including the queer cowboy, the emergence of lesbian chic, and the expansion of queer representations of blackness. This accessible volume offers useful analytical tools that will help readers make sense of the problems and promise of queer pop culture.

The Social Life of Criticism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 249

The Social Life of Criticism

Contends that gender politics were influential in the early development of literary criticism and the writings of female critics

Women Reviewing Women in Nineteenth-century Britain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 198

Women Reviewing Women in Nineteenth-century Britain

long tradition of female literary activity up to the nineteenth century. She draws on commentary by male critics of the period as well, to provide context for this important contribution to the recuperation of women's critical discourse in ninteenth-century Britain." --Book Jacket.

Women's Diaries as Narrative in the Nineteenth-century Novel
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 202

Women's Diaries as Narrative in the Nineteenth-century Novel

Using private diary writing as her model, Catherine Delafield investigates the cultural significance of nineteenth-century women's writing and reading practices. Examining historical and fictional diaries by authors such as Frances Burney, Elizabeth Gaskell, Anne Brontë, Wilkie Collins and Bram Stoker, Delafield reveals the ideological discrepancy between the private diary and its performance in the role of narrator, offering fresh insights into domesticity, authorship, and the diary as a feminine form and model for narrative.

Queer Kinship after Wilde
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 301

Queer Kinship after Wilde

Queer Kinship after Wilde investigates the afterlife of the Decadent Movement's ideas about kinship, desire, and the family during the modernist period within a global context. Drawing on archival materials, including diaries, correspondence, unpublished manuscripts, and photograph albums, it tells the story of individuals with ties to late-Victorian Decadence and Oscar Wilde who turned to the fin-de-siècle past for inspiration as they attempted to operate outside the heteronormative boundaries restricting the practice of marriage and the family. These post-Victorian Decadents and Decadent modernists engaged in translation, travel, and transnational collaboration in pursuit of different models of connection that might facilitate their disentanglement from conventional sexual and gender ideals. Queer Kinship after Wilde attends to the successes and failures that resulted from these experiments, the new approaches to affiliation inflected by a cosmopolitan or global perspective that occurred within these networks as well as the practices marked by Decadence's troubling patterns of Orientalism and racial fetishism.

Economies of Desire at the Victorian Fin de Sie
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 227

Economies of Desire at the Victorian Fin de Sie

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015-10-14
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  • Publisher: Routledge

This volume marks the first sustained study to interrogate how and why issues of sexuality, desire, and economic processes intersect in the literature and culture of the Victorian fin de siècle. At the end of the nineteenth-century, the move towards new models of economic thought marked the transition from a marketplace centred around the fulfilment of ‘needs’ to one ministering to anything that might, potentially, be desired. This collection considers how the literature of the period meditates on the interaction between economy and desire, doing so with particular reference to the themes of fetishism, homoeroticism, the literary marketplace, social hierarchy, and consumer culture. Draw...

The Forms of Michael Field
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 288

The Forms of Michael Field

Michael Field, the poetic identity created by Katharine Bradley (1846-1914) and her niece Edith Cooper (1862-1913), ceaselessly experimented with forms of identity and forms of literary expression. The Forms of Michael Field argues that their modes of self-creation are analogous to their poetic creations, and that exploring them in tandem is the best way to understand Michael Field’s cultural and literary importance. Michael Field deploys a different form in each volume of their lyric poetry: translations of Sappho, ekphrasis, songs, sonnets, and devotional verse. They also appropriate and revise the dramatic genres of verse tragedy and the masque. Each of these experiments in form enable Michael Field to differently address the cultural questions that beset late-Victorian women writers. Drawing on the insights of new lyric studies and new formalism, this book analyzes Michael Field’s continual quest for the aesthetic forms that best express their evolving ideas about identity and sexuality, gender and sacrifice, lyric voice and authority.