Romantic Women's Writing and Sexual Transgression
Online ISBN:
9781399507646
Print ISBN:
9781399507622
Publisher:
Edinburgh University Press
Book
Romantic Women's Writing and Sexual Transgression
David Sigler (ed.)
David Sigler
(ed.)
Professor of English
University of Calgary
Find on
Published online:
19 September 2024
Published in print:
1 February 2024
Online ISBN:
9781399507646
Print ISBN:
9781399507622
Publisher:
Edinburgh University Press
Cite
Ready, Kathryn, and David Sigler (eds), Romantic Women's Writing and Sexual Transgression (Edinburgh , 2024; online edn, Edinburgh Scholarship Online, 19 Sept. 2024), https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781399507622.001.0001, accessed 6 May 2025.
Abstract
Women’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 theorising 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.
Contents
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Front Matter
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1
Introduction
David Sigler
-
2
Feminising Romantic Sexuality, Perverting Feminine Romanticism
Kathryn Ready
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3
Reorienting Multi-dimensional Sex with Objects in Millenium Hall
Kate Singer
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4
The Necrophilia of Wollstonecraft’s ‘The Cave of Fancy’
David Sigler
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5
Sexual Violence, Sexual Transgression and the Law in Mary Hays’s The Victim of Prejudice
Kathleen Emily Hurlock
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6
‘Thoughts that Breathe and Words that Burn’: Barbauld, Masturbation and the Novel
Kathryn Ready
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7
Resistive Embodiment and Incestuous Desire in Mary Shelley’s Mathilda
Crystal Veronie
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8
‘Our Dire Transgression’: Mary Diana Dods in the Biblical Sense
Colin Carman
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9
George Sand, Indiana and the Transgressive Work of Idealism
Richard C. Sha
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10
Emily Brontë’s Shelleyan Poetics of Sexual Ambivalence
Amanda Blake Davis
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11
Primroses in the Porridge: Hareton Earnshaw’s Transgression against his Homosocial Family in Wuthering Heights
Chantel Lavoie
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End Matter
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