Torrid Zones
Available
 
About the Book
How did the creation of the "Other" woman in English narratives contribute to the displacement of sexuality onto the exotic or savage woman? How did this cultural invention reinforce the cult of domesticity at home? What were the social and economic forces driving the process? Among the first books to consider issues of empire in relation to literary texts of the eighteenth century, Torrid Zones offers a compelling revision of the history of feminism in a postcolonial context. Felicity Nussbaum argues that the need to control women's sexuality in eighteenth-century England intensified as the demands of trade and colonization required an ever-larger, able-bodied population. Describing how women's reproductive labor was harnessed to that task, Nussbaum explores issues such as the production of life, of goods, and of desire. She also considers a variety of cultural practices (usually construed as exotic) in England and the empire, including polygamy, infanticide, prostitution, homoeroticism, and arranged marriages. Torrid Zones includes new readings of significant texts by and about female subjects, including novels by Defoe, Richardson, Johnson, Cleland, Lennox, Sarah Scott, Frances Sheridan, and Phebe Gibbes. It also considers the more broadly defined texts of culture such as travel narratives, medical documents, legal records, and engravings. "I take as a central metaphor for the consideration of maternity and sexuality the concept of torrid zones, both the geographical torrid zones of the territory between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn, and the torrid zone mapped onto the human body, especially the female body. A premise of my study is that the contrasts among the torrid, temperate, and frigid zones of the globe are formative in imagining that a sexualized woman of empire is distinct from domestic English womanhood. The general category of 'woman' muddles the binaries between mother and whore, self and Other, center and periphery."-from the Introduction
Book Details
ISBN-13: 9780801850752
EAN: 9780801850752
Publisher Date: 01 Nov 1995
Age-Max: UP
Binding: PAPERBACK
Book Type: English
Depth: 19
Gardner Classification Code: Q04
Grade-Min: Post Graduate
Illustration: Y
Language: English
MediaMail: Y
Pagination: 248 pages, 1, black & white illustrations
Returnable: N
Spine Width: 16 mm
Width: 140 mm
ISBN-10: 0801850754
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Acedemic Level: English
Age-Min: 22
Bood Data Readership Text: Undergraduate
Continuations: English
Dewey: 820.935
Grade-Max: Up
Height: 216 mm
Illustrations: 1, black & white illustrations
LCCN: 95011801
No of Pages: 248
PrintOnDemand: N
Series Title: Parallax: Re-visions of Culture and Society
Sub Title: Maternity, Sexuality, and Empire in Eighteenth-Century English Narratives
Year Of Publication: 1995