Imagining Gender in Biographical Fiction

Author:   Julia Novak ,  Caitríona Ní Dhúill
Publisher:   Springer International Publishing AG
Edition:   1st ed. 2022
ISBN:  

9783031090189


Pages:   392
Publication Date:   16 December 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Imagining Gender in Biographical Fiction


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Author:   Julia Novak ,  Caitríona Ní Dhúill
Publisher:   Springer International Publishing AG
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
Edition:   1st ed. 2022
Weight:   0.657kg
ISBN:  

9783031090189


ISBN 10:   3031090187
Pages:   392
Publication Date:   16 December 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

1. Imagining Gender in Biographical Fiction: Introduction. Part I. Recovery, Revision, Ventriloquism: Imagining Historical Women. 2. “Everything Is Out of Place”: Virginia Woolf, Women, and (Meta-)Historical Biofiction.3. Fictional Futures for a Buried Past: Representations of Lucia Joyce.4. Imagining Jiang Qing: The Biographer’s Truth in Anchee Min’s Becoming Madame Mao. Part II. Re-imagining the Early Modern Subject. 5. From Betrayed Wife to Betraying Wife: Re-writing Katherine of Aragon as Catalina in Philippa Gregory’s The Constant Princess.6. Jean Plaidy and Philippa Gregory Fighting for Gender Equality Through Katherine Parr’s Narrative.- 7. Australian Women Writing Tudor Lives. Part III. Writing the Writer: History, Voyeurism, Victimisation. 8. Biofiction, Compulsory Sexuality, and Celibate Modernism in Colm Tóibín’s The Master and David Lodge’s Author, Author.9. In Poe’s Shadow: Frances Sargent Osgood.10. Stanisława Przybyszewska as a Case of Posthumous Victimisation: On the Ethics of Biofiction. Part IV. Creativity and Gender in the Arts and Sciences. 11. Re-visiting the Renaissance Virtuosa in Biofiction on Sofonisba Anguissola.12. The “Mother of the Theory of Relativity”? Re-imagining Mileva Marić in Marie Benedict’s The Other Einstein (2016). Part V. Queering Biofiction. 13. Visceral Biofiction: Herculine Barbin, Intersex Embodiment, and the Biological Imaginary in Aaron Apps’s Dear Herculine.14. “A Way Out of the Prison of Gender”: Interview with Novelist Patricia Duncker.

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Author Information

Caitríona Ní Dhúill is Professor in German at University College Cork, Ireland. She is the author of Metabiography: Reflecting on Biography (Palgrave Macmillan, 2020) and Sex in Imagined Spaces: Gender and Utopia from More to Bloch (2010). She is co-editor of the journal Austrian Studies, and guest co-editor of a double special issue of Poetics Today (2016) on negative futures. She has published numerous articles and book chapters on gender theory, utopian theory, modernist literature and life writing.                                                    Julia Novak holds a tenure-track professorship for Anglophone Literature and Mediality at the University of Vienna. Her work on life writing and biofiction has appeared in journals such as Biography; Contemporary Women’s Writing; a/b: Auto/Biography Studies; Life Writing; and the Journal of Postcolonial Writing. She has co-edited a special issue on “Women’s Lives on Screen” for the European Journal of Life Writing (2021), of which she is an editor, as well as Experiments in Life Writing: Intersections of Auto/Biography and Fiction (Palgrave 2017); Life Writing and Celebrity (Routledge 2020); and the inaugural issue of the Journal of Historical Fictions (2017).  

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