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Gendered Pathologies examines nineteenth-century literary
representations of the pathologized female body in relation to
biomedical discourses about gender and society in Victorian
England. According to medical and scientific views of the period,
the woman who did not conform to the dictates of gender ideology
was, biologically speaking, aberrant: a deviation from the norm.
Yet, although marginalized in a social sense, the "deviant" woman
was central as a literary and cultural trope. Analyzing novels by
Charles Dickens, H. Rider Haggard, and Thomas Hardy alongside
Foucault's notion of perverse sexualities and Herbert Spencer's
model of the social organism, Archimedes argues that the
pathologized female body displaces or resolves, on a narrative
level, larger cultural anxieties about the health of the British as
a species. While earlier feminist investigations asserted that
bourgeois ideology helped to construct scientific discourses about
female sexuality and social behavior, this study takes these
assertions as a starting point . Examining incest, racial
stereotyping, and neurasthenia, Gendered Pathologies attempts to
shed light on the ways in which biological thinking permeated
British culture in the second half of the nineteenth century.
Gendered Pathologies examines nineteenth-century literary
representations of the pathologized female body in relation to
biomedical discourses about gender and society in Victorian
England. According to medical and scientific views of the period,
the woman who did not conform to the dictates of gender ideology
was, biologically speaking, aberrant: a deviation from the norm.
Yet, although marginalized in a social sense, the "deviant" woman
was central as a literary and cultural trope. Analyzing novels by
Charles Dickens, H. Rider Haggard, and Thomas Hardy alongside
Foucault's notion of perverse sexualities and Herbert Spencer's
model of the social organism, Archimedes argues that the
pathologized female body displaces or resolves, on a narrative
level, larger cultural anxieties about the health of the British as
a species. While earlier feminist investigations asserted that
bourgeois ideology helped to construct scientific discourses about
female sexuality and social behavior, this study takes these
assertions as a starting point . Examining incest, racial
stereotyping, and neurasthenia, Gendered Pathologies attempts to
shed light on the ways in which biological thinking permeated
British culture in the second half of the nineteenth century.
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