Collapsing the Cartographies of Gender and Nationality: Howe’s Transatlantic Explorations in The Hermaphrodite and From the Oak to the Olive

IF 0.1 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Denise M. Kohn
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Abstract

Abstract:Like many nineteenth-century American writers, Julia Ward Howe found that the expanding culture of transatlantic travel offered her the liberty to explore, study, and work. In this article, the author examines Howe’s novel, The Hermaphrodite, which is set in England, Germany, and Rome, in conjunction with her chapter on Rome in her travel book From the Oak to the Olive. Reading these texts through the lens of cultural geography and transatlantic studies, the author suggests that our understanding of The Hermaphrodite should be broadened to see the novel as a type of travel narrative in which the intersex protagonist Laurence journeys across a picturesque Europe, identifying at times as male, female, and nonbinary within different spaces. In both The Hermaphrodite and From Oak to Olive, Howe seeks to write literary narratives of the transatlantic world, and though one is fiction and one is autobiographical, they are both imaginative constructions of the relationships between space, gender, and national identity.
瓦解性别和国籍的制图:豪在《雌雄同体》和《从橡树到橄榄》中的跨大西洋探索
摘要:像许多19世纪的美国作家一样,朱莉娅·沃德·豪发现,跨大西洋旅行的文化不断扩大,给了她探索、学习和工作的自由。在这篇文章中,作者考察了豪的小说《雌雄同体》,这本小说以英国、德国和罗马为背景,并结合她在旅行书《从橡树到橄榄树》中关于罗马的章节。通过文化地理学和跨大西洋研究的视角来解读这些文本,作者建议我们应该拓宽对《雌雄同体》的理解,把这部小说看作一种旅行叙事,在这部小说中,双性人主角劳伦斯在风景如画的欧洲旅行,有时在不同的空间里识别出男性、女性和非二元性。在《雌雄同体》和《从橡树到橄榄》中,豪都试图用文学叙事的方式来描述大西洋两岸的世界,尽管一个是小说,一个是自传,但它们都是对空间、性别和国家认同之间关系的想象性建构。
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期刊介绍: The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association publishes articles on literature, literary theory, pedagogy, and the state of the profession written by M/MLA members. One issue each year is devoted to the informal theme of the recent convention and is guest-edited by the year"s M/MLA president. This issue presents a cluster of essays on a topic of broad interest to scholars of modern literatures and languages. The other issue invites the contributions of members on topics of their choosing and demonstrates the wide range of interests represented in the association. Each issue also includes book reviews written by members on recent scholarship.
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