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Traces Victorian self-harm through an engagement with literary fiction
Self-Harm in New Woman Writing offers a trans-disciplinary study of Victorian literature, culture and medicine through engagement with the recurrent trope of self-harm in writing by and about the British New Woman. Focusing on self-starvation, excessive drinking and self-mutilation, this study explores narratives of female resistance to Victorian patriarchy embedded in the work of both canonical and largely unknown women writers of the 1880s and 1890s, including Mary Angela Dickens and Victoria Cross. The book argues that the conditions of modernity now associated with self-harm in twentieth-century psychiatry (but beginning at the Fin de Si鐵le) provided the socio-cultural backdrop for a surge of interest in self-harm as a site of imaginative exploration at a time when women's role in society was rapidly changing.
Key Features
Alexandra Gray is a Sessional Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Portsmouth. She is the co-editor of a forthcoming collection of academic essays on the late-Victorian-and-Edwardian woman writer Lucas Malet, and the author of forthcoming articles and essays on the New Woman, nineteenth-century medical history and the female orphan figure in Victorian fiction.
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