Impossible Women: Lesbian Figures and American Literature

Impossible Women: Lesbian Figures and American Literature

by Valerie Rohy
Impossible Women: Lesbian Figures and American Literature

Impossible Women: Lesbian Figures and American Literature

by Valerie Rohy

Hardcover

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Overview

Impossible Women fills a critical gap in queer theory by spotlighting representations of lesbian sexuality in nineteenth- and twentieth-century American literature. Reading through the lens of feminist and psychoanalytic theory, Valerie Rohy considers texts by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Kate Chopin, Henry James, Zora Neale Hurston, Ernest Hemingway, and Elizabeth Bishop.

Addressing American ideologies of reproduction and representation, Impossible Women suggests that lesbian figures are made to symbolize both the unrepresentable and the failures of meaning inherent in language. Rohy traces the ways lesbian sexuality—relegated to the domain of the ineffable, yet endlessly subject to inscription—appears in tropes of transference and displacement, the disembodied voice, repetition-compulsion, and the uncanny. Impossible Women also asks what cultural work such figures perform, locating lesbian desire in American literary history and engaging issues of genre and narrative, social formations such as the rhetoric of the "New Woman," and intersections of racism, sexism, and homophobia.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801437281
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 04/25/2000
Series: 6/30/2008
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.88(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Valerie Rohy is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Vermont. She is coeditor, with Elizabeth Ammons, of American Local Color Writing, 1880–1920: An Anthology.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsvii
Introduction: Reading Impossibility1
1The Romance of the Real: The Blithedale Romance and The Bostonians13
2The Reproduction of Meaning: Language, Oedipality, and The Awakening42
3Modernist Perversity: The Repetition of Desire in The Sun Also Rises65
4Oral Narratives: "Race" and Sexuality in Their Eyes Were Watching God91
5Love's Substitutions: Elizabeth Bishop and the Lie of Language117
Conclusion144
Notes151
Index185

What People are Saying About This

Diana Fuss

Impossible Women is the first book I know that brings lesbian theory to bear on the canonical works of American literature. Finding lesbian sexuality in places we may not have thought to look for it, Rohy's wickedly clever book shows how figures of female perversity haunt our national literature. A thoughtful, articulate, and convincing book.

Nicole Tonkovich

Impossible Women brings into productive conversation two fields of scholarly inquiry often kept separate from each other: literary history (and canonicity) and feminist/lesbian criticism and politics. Impressively written and researched, it deserves the attention—and appreciation—of both fields. An engaging and important book.

Linda Wagner-Martin

Impossible Women is brilliantly written and clear, a narrative intent on driving its reader to the core of arguments and to the end of the book, sure to become one of the seminal critical texts of the field.

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