Adoption and Victorian culture
In: The history of the family: an international quarterly, Band 11, Heft 4, S. 211-221
ISSN: 1081-602X
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In: The history of the family: an international quarterly, Band 11, Heft 4, S. 211-221
ISSN: 1081-602X
In: The economic history review, Band 28, Heft 2, S. 338
ISSN: 1468-0289
In: Cultural studies, Band 30, Heft 2, S. 183-204
ISSN: 1466-4348
In: Comparative studies in society and history, Band 39, Heft 4, S. 742-777
ISSN: 1475-2999
In 1866, theAtlantic Monthlypublished a fictional case study of an army surgeon who had lost all of his limbs during the Civil War. Written anonymously by American neurologist Silas Weir Mitchell, "The Case of George Dedlow" describes not only the series of wounds and infections which led to the amputation of all four of the soldier's arms and legs but also the after-effects of amputation. Reduced to what he terms "a useless torso, more like some strange larval creature than anything of human shape," Dedlow finds that in disarticulating his body, amputation articulates anatomical norms. His observation of his own uniquely altered state qualifies him to speak in universal terms about the relationship between sentience and selfhood: "I have dictated these pages," he says, "not to shock my readers, but to possess them with facts in regard to the relation of the mind to the body" (1866:5). As such, the story explores the meaning of embodiment, finding in a fragmented anatomy the opportunity to piece together a more complete understanding of how the body functions—physically and metaphysically—as a whole.
In: Nineteenth century series
Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part 1: On Victorian Time Historiographies of Culture -- 1 The Victorians in the Rearview Mirror -- 2 The Legacy of Victorian Spectacle -- Part 2: Victorian Commodities for Postmodern Consumers -- 3 The New Victorians -- 4 More Stories about Clothing and Furniture -- Part 3: The Ways Victorians Live Now -- 5 Wilde Americana -- 6 Victorians on Broadway at the Present Time -- 7 Rounding Up the Usual Suspect -- 8 Legal Uses of Victorian Fic -- 9 "Nurs'd up amongst the scenes I have describ'd" -- 10 Revisiting the Serial Format of Dickens's Novels -- or, Little Dorrit Goes a Long Way -- 11 Disseminating Victorian Culture in the Postmillennial Classroom -- Contributors -- Index.
In: Studies in European Cultural Transition v.15
In: Social history of medicine, Band 18, Heft 1, S. 129-130
ISSN: 1477-4666
From sociological studies of urban squalor and sanitary reform, to critiques of the politics of prostitution, pathology, poverty, and criminology, criticism has tended to read nineteenth-century "decay" as an ideological apparatus keyed to the discursive policing of wayward, diseased, and abnormal body. Read through the Victorian theories of degeneration and decadence, on the one hand, and the contemporary discourses of defilement and abjection, on the other, criticism has tended to cast decay has a symbolic register for the period's ideological investment in normative progressive development, such that backwardness, depravity, and devolution are reified and read as symptomatic fears of taxonomic transgression. As my project demonstrates, however, in their minute and sustained attentions to the periodic pattern of dissolution and re-formation, the Victorians came to view decay as the conditional possibility for form's continual emergence. Decay was not "matter out of place." It was matter ceaselessly reforming itself on the stream of time. This conception of decay, in turn, reconfigures our critical interpretation of the Victorian ideologies of life, growth, progress, and reform. Decay does not pathologically mark the failure of progressive ideology; instead, it expresses the plasticity necessary for ceaseless growth. Recuperating the temporal dynamics of formation-in-decay, this project rethinks the categorical coordinates of abjection and defilement. In a world where everything—the pulsations of electromagnetic waves, the geomorphic crust of the earth, the mineralogical components of crystals, and, of course, the cellular tissues of biological bodies—was constantly dissolving and recombining, it does not make sense to speak of the singular, delimited subject's confrontation with the contaminating, liminal object. Rather, we must speak of the multiple, heterogeneous, and simultaneous "interabsorption" of subjects and objects. In their investigations of this horizontal relationality, the Victorian theorists of decay emphasized the rhythms of doing and undoing and, thus, folded the abject processes of expulsion and rejection into the experience of growth and development. Accordingly, this project focuses on the self-formation of the porous individual in relationship to the ever-dissolving and ever-renewing world. I argue that these manifold entities mutually emerged through the shared rhythms of decay – eddies and rests, drifts and advances – revealing the possibilities that linger in formlessness. Decay's negations, thus, allowed for radical conceptions of receptivity, as the individual pocketed and secreted temporal absences that allowed for potent possibilities – ethical rebirth, transhistorical connectivity, exquisite moments of ecstasy. Turning to the tremulous self-formations of Esther Summerson and Richard Carstone in Charles Dickens' Bleak House (1852-53), the nubile girls of Winnington Hall in John Ruskin's The Ethics of the Dust (1865), the budding aesthete in Walter Pater's Studies in the History of the Renaissance (1873), and the doomed Lucian Taylor in Arthur Machen's The Hill of Dreams (1907), this project reframes critical debates about abject materiality to address the environmental affordances of formlessness.
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In: Social history, Band 34, Heft 3, S. 360-362
ISSN: 1470-1200
In: Feminist review, Band 71, Heft 1, S. 109-111
ISSN: 1466-4380
In: Gender and performance
In: Journal of colonialism & colonial history, Band 6, Heft 3
ISSN: 1532-5768
In: Women's studies international forum, Band 16, Heft 5, S. 546
In: Labour / Le Travail, Band 32, S. 359