A subtle and illuminating study of the intersection of ideology and literature during the period of the New Woman and tumultuous changes in - and debates about - gender roles. - Tamar Heller, author of Dead Secrets: Wilkie Collins and the Female Gothic

Patricia Murphy explores the tenuous interplay of gender and science to show how Victorian literature both challenged and reinforced a constrictive role for women. Focusing on a specific body of literature involving women intensely associated with scientific pursuits, and examining selected noncanonical writings, Murphy demonstrates how these works informed the ""Woman Question"" by reinforcing or rejecting presumed truths about gender and science. Some of these texts offer lucid insights into the ways in which women were defined, marginalized, and excluded. In his novel ""Two on a Tower"", Thomas Hardy presented science as a masculine realm threatened by female intrusion, while Wilkie Collins ""in Heart and Science"" depicted a woman interested in science as a villainous schemer who falls far short of the Victorian ideal of femininity. And although Charles Reade's novel ""A Woman-Hater"" was more sympathetic in its portrayal of a female physician, it continued to reinforce Victorian stereotypes. Murphy also shows us the poetry of science enthusiast Constance Naden, who used the language of the discipline to reflect its marginalization of women. She uses the travel memoirs of botanical painter, Marianne North, which reveal her attempts to achieve a gender-neutral voice to position her work within the Victorian scientific realm. These close readings show how prejudices about women's intellectual inferiority infiltrated popular culture.
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Explores the tenuous interplay of gender and science to show how Victorian literature both challenged and reinforced a constrictive role for women. This book focuses on a specific body of literature involving women intensely associated with scientific pursuits, and examines selected noncanonical writings.
Read more

Product details

ISBN
9780826216823
Published
2006-12-30
Publisher
University of Missouri Press; University of Missouri Press
Weight
535 gr
Height
235 mm
Width
160 mm
Thickness
23 mm
Age
G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
256

Biographical note

PATRICIA MURPHY is Associate Professor of English at Missouri Southern State University and the author of Time Is of the Essence: Temporality, Gender, and the New Woman. She lives in Joplin.