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Friday, November 24, 2006

Friday, November 24, 2006 12:03 am by M. in , ,    No comments
No, this post is not about Mr. Rochester's talk about sharing beds all night or day in the recent Jane Eyre BBC adaptation, but the title of a recently published scholar book:

Sex in Mind. The Gendered Brain in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Mental Sciences
by Rachel Malane
Series: Studies in Nineteenth-Century British Literature Vol. 22
Peter Lang Publishing Group.

Sex in Mind: The Gendered Brain in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Mental Sciences explores the role of the sexed brain in Victorian science and literature, showing the increasing nineteenth-century fixation on abnormal brain function and the cultural desire to create mental categories based on gender. In a discussion of neurology, psychology, and other mental sciences, Rachel Malane examines how the rational male mind and the emotional female mind became a culturally accepted idea that was substantiated by scientists and how the Victorian preoccupation with the sexed mind infiltrated contemporary literature. Focusing on the novels of Charlotte Brontë, Wilkie Collins, and Thomas Hardy, Malane analyzes how these narratives of love, insanity, and tragedy were in dynamic conversation with the prevailing views about the brain. Sex in Mind offers an intriguing look at the nineteenth-century understanding of the gendered mind - such as the belief that the reproductive organs were connected to the brain - and it shows how Victorian writers both incorporated and dissected the idea that men and women have separate minds.

Gendered brain spaces and the anxiety of transgression in Charlotte Brontë’s novels is the title of the chapter devoted to Charlotte's novels.

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