Modernist Sexualities
By (Author) Hugh Stevens
Edited by Caroline Howlett
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
1st December 2000
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
820.900912
Paperback
288
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
In this study, critics working in Britain, Canada and the United States discuss modernism's imaginative rethinkings of sex, gender and sexuality. Employing diverse theoretical approaches, the essays in this volume show how modernism intersects with historical developments such as the suffragette movement, technological change and its effects on women and labour, the growth of pseudo-scientific writings and the burgeoning lesbian and gay movement. They show how modernism questions the fundamentals of identity and upsets the fixities of gender and sexuality through a fascination with ambiguities, marginality and the crossing of borders. The book explores strategies of expressing same-sex desires in unexpected settings, modes of remaking sex and the body, relations between writing and reading, between public and private, between performer, performance and audience in a modernism broadly conceived to include political demonstrations, political essays and the visual arts alongside narrative and poetry.
Hugh Stevens is Lecturer in the Department of English and Related Literature at the University of York
Caroline Howlett is a freelance editor in Cambridge, England