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Outlaw Fathers in Victorian and Modern British Literature - Queering Patriarchy (Hardcover)
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Outlaw Fathers in Victorian and Modern British Literature - Queering Patriarchy (Hardcover)
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Outlaw Fathers in Victorian and Modern British Literature: Queering
Patriarchy traces the representations of outlaw fathers, or queer
patriarchs, and their relationships with their queer sons, in a
particular literary tradition: mid-to-late-Victorian and
twentieth-century British fiction and memoir. Specifically, I look
at such representations in Anthony Trollope's Doctor Thorne (1858)
and The Prime Minister (1875-76) (while also drawing on An
Autobiography (1883) and The Duke's Children (1880)); Samuel
Butler's The Way of All Flesh (published in 1901), Henry James's
"The Lesson of the Master" (1888), J. R. Ackerley's My Father and
Myself (written in the 1930s and published in 1968), E. M.
Forster's "Little Imber" (1961) (with an occasional detour into The
Longest Journey (1907), Howards End (1909), and Maurice (published
in 1971)), and Alan Hollinghurst's The Spell (1998). In the coda, I
consider the implications of including transgender, transnational
female-to-male fathers of color in the ranks of queer patriarchy
and discuss two contemporary novels, Jackie Kay's Trumpet (1998,
Scotland) and Patricia Powell's The Pagoda (1998, Jamaica and the
United States), as well as-briefly-an episode an episode of the
television show The L-Word (2008) and the documentary U-People
(2007). The term "queer patriarchy" has two components. The first
one is a non-traditional, primarily-but not
exclusively-non-heterosexual, pervasively present, and culturally
important, paternal subjectivity. The second one is the bond
between such queer paternal figures and their sons, biological and
non-biological. This study pays attention primarily to the
relationship between psyche, language, and ideology, but it will
join a larger conversation about the changing roles of men in
general and fathers in particular, which is taking place outside of
the field of literary studies.
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