Full Description

Responsibility Statement
Language Code eng
Edition First edition
Collection Source Cambridge
Cataloguing Source LibUI eng rda
Content Type text (rdacontent)
Media Type computer (rdamedia)
Carrier Type online resource (rdacarrier)
Physical Description 254 pages
Link
 
  •  Availability
  •  Digital Files: 1
  •  Review
  •  Cover
  •  Abstract
Call Number Barcode Number Availability
e20528221 20-22-34469214 TERSEDIA
No review available for this collection: 20528221
 Abstract
Before lesbianism became a specific identity category in the West, its mere suggestion functioned as a powerful source of scandal in early twentieth-century British and Anglo-American culture. Reconsidering notions of the 'invisible' or 'apparitional' lesbian, Jodie Medd argues that lesbianism's representational instability, and the scandals it generated, rendered it an influential force within modern politics, law, art and the literature of modernist writers like James Joyce, Ezra Pound and Virginia Woolf. Medd's analysis draws on legal proceedings and parliamentary debates as well as crises within modern literary production - patronage relations, literary obscenity and cultural authority - to reveal how lesbian suggestion forced modern political, cultural and literary institutions to negotiate their own identities, ideals and limits. Medd's text will be of great interest to scholars and graduate students in gender and women's studies, modernist literary studies and English literature.