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The Marked Body: Domestic Violence in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Literature

The Marked Body: Domestic Violence in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Literature

Lynn Shakinovsky
3.7/5 ( ratings)
The ambiguities and paradoxes of domestic violence were amplified in Victorian culture, which emphasized the home as a woman's place of security. In The Marked Body, Kate Lawson and Lynn Shakinovsky examine the discarded and violated bodies of middle-class women in selected texts of mid-nineteenth-century fiction and poetry. Guided by observations from feminism, psychoanalysis, and trauma theory, they argue that, in these works, domestic violence is a crucible in which the female body is placed, where it becomes marked by scars and disfigurement. Yet, they contend, these wounds go beyond violence to bring these women to a broader state of female subjectivity, sexuality, and consciousness. The female body, already the site of alterity, is inscribed with something that cannot be expressed; it thus becomes that which is culturally and physically denied, the place which is not.
Language
English
Pages
212
Format
Paperback
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Release
July 18, 2002
ISBN
0791453766
ISBN 13
9780791453766

The Marked Body: Domestic Violence in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Literature

Lynn Shakinovsky
3.7/5 ( ratings)
The ambiguities and paradoxes of domestic violence were amplified in Victorian culture, which emphasized the home as a woman's place of security. In The Marked Body, Kate Lawson and Lynn Shakinovsky examine the discarded and violated bodies of middle-class women in selected texts of mid-nineteenth-century fiction and poetry. Guided by observations from feminism, psychoanalysis, and trauma theory, they argue that, in these works, domestic violence is a crucible in which the female body is placed, where it becomes marked by scars and disfigurement. Yet, they contend, these wounds go beyond violence to bring these women to a broader state of female subjectivity, sexuality, and consciousness. The female body, already the site of alterity, is inscribed with something that cannot be expressed; it thus becomes that which is culturally and physically denied, the place which is not.
Language
English
Pages
212
Format
Paperback
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Release
July 18, 2002
ISBN
0791453766
ISBN 13
9780791453766

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