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Bodies of Modernism: Physical Disability in Transatlantic Modernist Literature
Maren Tova Linett
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Bodies of Modernism brings a new and exciting analytical lens to modernist literature, that of critical disability studies. The book offers new readings of canonical and noncanonical writers from both sides of the Atlantic including Flannery O'Connor, Eudora Welty, H. G. Wells, D. H. Lawrence, Elizabeth Bowen, Henry Green, Olive Moore, Carson McCullers, Tennessee Williams, J. M. Synge, Florence Barclay, Virginia Woolf, and James Joyce. Through readings of this wide range of texts and with chapters focusing on mobility impairments, deafness, blindness, and deformity, the study reveals both modernism's skepticism about and dependence on fantasies of whole, "normal" bodies.
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Cover
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Title
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Copyright
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Dedication
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction
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One. Mobility and Sexuality
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Two. Blindness and Intimacy
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Three. Deafness, Communication, and Knowledge
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Four. Knowledge Redux: Sensory Disability in Ulysses
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Five. Deformity and Modernist Form
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Epilogue
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Notes
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Works Cited
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Index
Citable Link
Published: 2016
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
- 978-0-472-12248-6 (ebook)
- 978-0-472-07331-3 (hardcover)
- 978-0-472-05331-5 (paper)