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

Book

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

DOI link for Women’s Literary Collaboration, Queerness, and Late-Victorian Culture

Women’s Literary Collaboration, Queerness, and Late-Victorian Culture book

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

DOI link for Women’s Literary Collaboration, Queerness, and Late-Victorian Culture

Women’s Literary Collaboration, Queerness, and Late-Victorian Culture book

ByJill R. Ehnenn
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2008
eBook Published 12 April 2017
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315233505
Pages 236
eBook ISBN 9781315233505
Subjects Language & Literature
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Ehnenn, J.R. (2008). Women’s Literary Collaboration, Queerness, and Late-Victorian Culture (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315233505

ABSTRACT

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 queer. Ehnenn's project shows that collaborative texts from such diverse genres as poetry, fiction, drama, the essay, and autobiography negotiate many limitations of post-Enlightenment patriarchy: Cartesian subjectivity and solitary creativity, industrial capitalism and alienated labor, and heterosexism. In so doing, these jointly authored texts employ a transgressive aesthetic and invoke the potentials of female spectatorship, refusals of representation, and the rewriting of history. Ehnenn's book will be a valuable resource for scholars and students of Victorian literature and culture, women's and gender studies, and collaborative writing.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |24 pages

Coming Together: An Introduction

chapter 1|33 pages

The “art and mystery of collaboration”: Authorial Economies, Queer Pleasures

chapter 2|38 pages

Looking Strategically: Feminist and Queer Aesthetics in “Beauty and Ugliness” and Sight and Song

chapter 3|37 pages

Refusing to Perform: Performative Silences in A Question of Memory and Alan’s Wife

chapter 4|35 pages

Collaborating with History: The Tragic Mary and The Real Charlotte

chapter 5|8 pages

Engaging Differences

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