GendersPsychology Press, 2000 - 177 páginas Combining cultural and literary history, Genders examines one of the most controversial terms in contemporary academic debate. Aimed at the student new to the field, this guide traces our concepts of genders at least as far back as the eighteenth century, then maps out the major lines of debate since that time. The authors survey such key movements as sexology, psychoanalysis and second-wave feminism, as well as work on masculinity, queer and gendered identities, readership and spectatorship. With constant reference to the impact of these debates upon the study of literature, Genders is an ideal introduction to a complex, controversial subject and a springboard into advanced literary and cultural studies. |
Conteúdo
Femininity and feminism | 1 |
The hero as man of letters | 59 |
Dissipation and natural character | 69 |
Queering the pitch | 86 |
Conclusion | 157 |
172 | |
175 | |
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American Andy Warhol argues become behaviour Bersani Boswell Boswell's bourgeois Brontë called Cambridge Camp Carlyle Carlyle's cinema complex criticism critique cultural debate desire discussion distinction early eighteenth century emotional essay example fantasy feeling female feminism feminist fiction film Foucault Freud gender identity Gethen Giovanni's Room grotesque grotesque body Habermas Halberstam Herculine Barbin heterosexual homosexuality human ideas identified imagined Jane Eyre Jünger kind language LeGuin lesbian literary lives London male body manly ideal meaning Michel's misogyny modern narrative nature Nightwood nineteenth century Noël Coward novel novelist Orlando paradox period pleasure political possible psychic psychoanalysis public sphere queer question Radclyffe Hall Radway readers reading relationship role romance seems sense sex and gender sexology sexual difference social society sodomite Stoller Storm of Steel suggests texts theory transformation University Press Victorian Warhol Wittig Wollstonecraft woman women writers Woolf writing York