With... Adam Sargant
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It's our last episode of series 1!!! Expect ghost, ghouls and lots of
laughs as we round off the series with Adam Sargant, AKA Haunted Haworth.
We'll be...
4 months ago
Edited by Kathryn Ready, David SiglerEdinburgh University PressISBN: 9781399507622Suggests that women’s writing was a crucial part of the history of sexuality in the Romantic periodPositions women’s writing as crucial to the history of sexuality in the long Romantic periodDevelops a new approach to the study of gender within Romanticism, by highlighting sexual transgression rather than obedience to cultural normsDevelops bold new approaches to several now canonical authors such as Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Shelley, George Sand, and Emily Brontë.Gives prominence to little known figures such as Mary Diana Dods and Elizabeth MoodyIncludes new work by emerging and leading scholars in the fieldWomen’s writing was a crucial part of the history of sexuality in the Romantic period, yet has not often been seen as part of that history. This collection shows how women writers fit into a tradition of Romanticism that recognizes transgressive sexuality as a defining feature. Building on recent research on the period’s sexual culture, it shows how women writers were theorizing perversions in their literary work and often leading transgressive sexual lives. In doing so, the collection also challenges current understandings of ‘transgression’ as a sexual category.
The book contains the chapters:
10. Emily Brontë’s Shelleyan Poetics of Sexual Ambivalence, Amanda Blake Davis
11. Primroses in the Porridge: Hareton Earnshaw’s Transgression against his Homosocial Family in Wuthering Heights, Chantel Lavoie
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