Description
About the Author
Deborah T. Meem is Professor of English and Women's Studies at the University of Cincinnati. She has published articles on Eliza Lynn Linton, and in the areas of gender, class, and sexuality studies.
Reviews
"Eliza Lynn Linton-the Victorian journalist, novelist, and fierce anti-feminist-could never decide whether she loved or hated being a woman. The Rebel of the Family-a strange, acidulous tale about a young woman striving (and failing) to break free from the sex-conventions of her day-is one of her most fascinating and tormented works. Linton put into it all of her own ferociously mixed feelings, and it remains, a century later, a mordant, rebarbative, yet peculiarly affecting work of art." - Terry Castle, Stanford University
"Eliza Lynn Linton was one of Victorian England's most outspoken critics of the 'modern woman,' even as her own independent, professional life so obviously bore out the importance of the struggle for women's rights that her writings condemned. Linton's life and work attest to complexities and contradictions of Victorian England's debates on the woman question, and The Rebel of the Family (1880)-perhaps her most intriguing novel (including one of the earliest sketches of the mannish lesbian, and serving as a model for Henry James's The Bostonians)-reflects these contradictions. This edition is a 'must read' for scholars of Victorian, gender, and women's studies." - Margaret Breen, University of Connecticut
Book Information
ISBN 9781551112930
Author Eliza Lynn Linton
Format Paperback
Page Count 487
Imprint Broadview Press Ltd
Publisher Broadview Press Ltd
Weight(grams) 535g
Dimensions(mm) 216mm * 140mm * 24mm