Body Language - (Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650-1850) by Kathleen Tamayo Alves (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Body Language examines the complex intersections of British eighteenth-century comic fiction and medical discourse.
- About the Author: KATHLEEN TAMAYO ALVES is an associate professor of English at Queensborough Community College of The City University of New York.
- 200 Pages
- Literary Criticism, Modern
- Series Name: Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650-1850
Description
About the Book
Body Language examines how eighteenth-century medical discourse informed the comic novel. Through comic representations of "leaky" female physical, psychological, and emotional embodiment, novels by Henry Fielding, Tobias Smollett, Laurence Sterne, and Charlotte Lennox engage political and social anxieties caused by women's sexuality.Book Synopsis
Body Language examines the complex intersections of British eighteenth-century comic fiction and medical discourse. By engaging medical writings of renowned and widely-read physicians of the Enlightenment such as John Freind, Thomas Sydenham, Albrecht von Haller, John Whytt, and William Cullen, with novels of humor by Henry Fielding, Tobias Smollett, Laurence Sterne, and Charlotte Lennox, Alves explains how medicine shaped comic language by dramatizing female-specific phenomena like menstruation, hysteria, nervous disorders, and pregnancy. In these novels, the medical belief that women are incapable of bodily self-regulation becomes an imperative for policing women's bodies and highlights the enduring shortcomings of patriarchal systems. Ultimately, these comic representations offer a counternarrative of women's bodies, agency, and selfhood, exposing masculine anxieties about the effectiveness of marriage to regulate women's sexuality.
Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.Review Quotes
"Body Language artfully weaves an interdisciplinary web of science, sexuality, and reading practices to reveal the feminist potential of comic modes. This incredibly detailed work on the overlooked area of female bodies in comic texts makes a unique and important contribution to scholarship on literature and medicine."--Laura R. Kremmel "author of Romantic Medicine and the Gothic Imagination: Morbid Anatomies"
"A rich exploration of the interrelation of eighteenth-century literature and medicine, Body Language deftly connects the formal constraints on fictional characters to those medical discourse places on living women. Alves's lucid and often deeply funny readings show that a patriarchal medical establishment can find little harder to account for than the ways that women escape efforts to define and constrain them."--Erin M. Goss "author of Revealing Bodies: Anatomy, Allegory, and the Grounds of Knowledge in the Long Eighteenth C"
"An erudite, engaging account of how eighteenth-century comic novels refigure, in fascinating and unexpected ways, misogynistic medical theories about ciswomen's embodiment. Through meticulous excavation of eighteenth-century medical treatises and highly original close readings of canonical novels by Smollett, Sterne, Fielding, and Lennox, Alves offers compelling new dimensions to the literary histories of medicine, gender, and sexuality. A must-read for specialists and non-specialists alike!"--Jason Farr "author of Novel Bodies: Disability and Sexuality in Eighteenth-Century British Literature"
"Offering deft and stimulating comparisons of eighteenth-century comic fiction and scientific writing, Body Language adds a vital chapter to the study of medicine, literature, and gender in the period. Alves's insightful analysis of seven novels alongside a range of medical texts shows how the female body, as a cultural signifier, can tell new stories."--Heather Meek "author of Reimagining Illness: Women Writers and Medicine in Eighteenth-Century Britain"
About the Author
KATHLEEN TAMAYO ALVES is an associate professor of English at Queensborough Community College of The City University of New York. Her research centers on eighteenth-century literature and culture, medicine, and literary history, and she has recently published in Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Eighteenth-Century Studies, and The Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation.