Unmaking Sex: The Gender Outlaws of Nineteenth-Century France
Autor Anne E. Lintonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 mar 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781316511824
ISBN-10: 1316511820
Pagini: 250
Dimensiuni: 160 x 235 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:Nouă
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:Cambridge, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1316511820
Pagini: 250
Dimensiuni: 160 x 235 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:Nouă
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:Cambridge, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Introduction: Gender revolution before intersex or transgender; Part I. A Cultural History of 'Hermaphrodism' from the Archives: 1. Prescribed fictions: stories of 'hermaphrodism' vs. true sex; 2. Outlaws from birth: 'doubtful sex' and the civil code; Part II. Contextualizing High and Low Literary Narratives: 3. Is she or isn't he? Plotting ambiguous gender; 4. Inheriting 'hermaphrodism': how degeneration theory changed literature and medicine; Epilogue: The nineteenth-century roots of contemporary resistance to true sex.
Recenzii
'Unmaking Sex is an impeccably researched and original study of the intersex phenomenon in medical and literary discourses of nineteenth-century France. Through expert synthesis of archival research into over 200 medical cases, Linton provides a cultural prehistory to today's widely-debated topic of gender boundaries. This truly interdisciplinary project succeeds in reconstructing a vast and complex network of myth, medicine, anatomy, and rhetoric in relation to the binary-unsettling realities of indeterminate sex. It will become a must-read for serious scholars of gender and the nineteenth century.' Andrea Goulet, University of Pennsylvania
'Anne E. Linton has opened up medical archives to telling effect, finding many a pathetic case become tragic in medical treatment. But her deeper commitment lies in showing us that the novelists, however limited by conventions, generally were out in front of the doctors in exploring the delicate terrain of intersex – hermaphrodism in 19th- century parlance. It's the novelists who were groping toward understanding the limits to binary thinking about gender and sex. The result is a book of high interest.' Peter Brooks, Yale University
'Linton's truly original achievement is to have repositioned nineteenth-century French culture, in its archival breadth as well as in the depth of its literary close readings, within a new critical space. This space is located in the vital tension between Foucault's history of sexuality and contemporary transgender criticism which underpins questions of identity in our own age.' Nick White, University of Cambridge
'This very smart book examines a wide range of accounts of those who defied the gender binary in nineteenth-century France. By combining literary and medical histories, Unmaking Sex offers an expansive and dynamic view of the centrality of debates over sexual difference and gender boundaries in nearly every sphere of life. The book challenges longstanding views of the emergence and acceptance of the concept of 'true sex.' An important and fascinating read!' Jen Manion, Amherst College
'In Unmaking Sex, Anne E. Linton shines expert light on the enormous commotion – epistemological, medical, legal, narrative – occasioned by ambiguously sexed bodies in nineteenth-century France. Her analysis, at once scholarly and humane, gives a more detailed picture of the lives of intersex people in this period than we have ever had before, and offers a new understanding of the importance of ambiguous sex as a concept in post-revolutionary France – unmaking along the way a number of received scholarly hypotheses about how the nineteenth century understood sex. A must-read for all scholars of French history and culture, as for all historians of gender and sexuality.' Andrew Counter, New College, University of Oxford
'Anne E. Linton has written the first account of a growing fascination with gender-ambiguous embodiment in nineteenth-century France. Literary and scientific texts on what was then called 'hermaphroditism' made sex and gender ambiguity into mysteries to be solved. Linton investigates this widespread interest and comes up with a truly compelling history of gender and sexuality.' Jack Halberstam, author of Female Masculinity and Trans*
'Linton offers massive and largely new archival evidence for the struggles of nineteenth-century doctors to determine 'true sex' in ambiguous cases, which she mobilizes to offer brilliant readings of a wide range of canonical and little-known fiction. This book is a model of historically grounded literary criticism and a major revisionist interpretation of how sex was understood in the nineteenth century. Foucault was not quite right about the famous Herculine Barbin case; and Making Sex was not quite what I thought it was.' Thomas W. Laqueur, Helen Fawcett Distinguished Professor of History (University of California, Berkeley)
'Anne E. Linton has opened up medical archives to telling effect, finding many a pathetic case become tragic in medical treatment. But her deeper commitment lies in showing us that the novelists, however limited by conventions, generally were out in front of the doctors in exploring the delicate terrain of intersex – hermaphrodism in 19th- century parlance. It's the novelists who were groping toward understanding the limits to binary thinking about gender and sex. The result is a book of high interest.' Peter Brooks, Yale University
'Linton's truly original achievement is to have repositioned nineteenth-century French culture, in its archival breadth as well as in the depth of its literary close readings, within a new critical space. This space is located in the vital tension between Foucault's history of sexuality and contemporary transgender criticism which underpins questions of identity in our own age.' Nick White, University of Cambridge
'This very smart book examines a wide range of accounts of those who defied the gender binary in nineteenth-century France. By combining literary and medical histories, Unmaking Sex offers an expansive and dynamic view of the centrality of debates over sexual difference and gender boundaries in nearly every sphere of life. The book challenges longstanding views of the emergence and acceptance of the concept of 'true sex.' An important and fascinating read!' Jen Manion, Amherst College
'In Unmaking Sex, Anne E. Linton shines expert light on the enormous commotion – epistemological, medical, legal, narrative – occasioned by ambiguously sexed bodies in nineteenth-century France. Her analysis, at once scholarly and humane, gives a more detailed picture of the lives of intersex people in this period than we have ever had before, and offers a new understanding of the importance of ambiguous sex as a concept in post-revolutionary France – unmaking along the way a number of received scholarly hypotheses about how the nineteenth century understood sex. A must-read for all scholars of French history and culture, as for all historians of gender and sexuality.' Andrew Counter, New College, University of Oxford
'Anne E. Linton has written the first account of a growing fascination with gender-ambiguous embodiment in nineteenth-century France. Literary and scientific texts on what was then called 'hermaphroditism' made sex and gender ambiguity into mysteries to be solved. Linton investigates this widespread interest and comes up with a truly compelling history of gender and sexuality.' Jack Halberstam, author of Female Masculinity and Trans*
'Linton offers massive and largely new archival evidence for the struggles of nineteenth-century doctors to determine 'true sex' in ambiguous cases, which she mobilizes to offer brilliant readings of a wide range of canonical and little-known fiction. This book is a model of historically grounded literary criticism and a major revisionist interpretation of how sex was understood in the nineteenth century. Foucault was not quite right about the famous Herculine Barbin case; and Making Sex was not quite what I thought it was.' Thomas W. Laqueur, Helen Fawcett Distinguished Professor of History (University of California, Berkeley)
Notă biografică
Descriere
A landmark study in the history of sexuality which redefines thinking about sex and gender in nineteenth-century France and beyond.