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(P)rescription narratives: feminist medical fiction and the failure of American censorship

Part of the Interventions in Nineteenth-Century American Literature and Culture series
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(P)rescription Narratives reveals how the act of narrative creates the subjects of disability, race, and gender during a period of censorship in American history. In a Crip Affect reading of woman-authored medical fiction from the Comstock law era, this book astutely argues that women writers of medical fiction practice storytelling as a form of narrative medicine that prescribes various forms of healing as an antidote to the shame engineered by an American culture of censorship. Woman-authored medical fiction exposes the limitations of social construction and materiality in conversations about the female body since subject formation relies upon multiple force relations that shape and are shaped by one another in ongoing processes that do not stop despite our efforts to interpret cultural artifacts. These multiple failures - to censor, to resist, to interpret - open up a space for negotiating how we engage the world with greater empathy.

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£85.00
Product Details
Edinburgh University Press
147449322X / 9781474493222
eBook (EPUB)
05/05/2022
English
240 pages
Copy: 5%; print: 5%
Published in Scotland. Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.