Borderlines: The Shiftings of Gender in British Romanticism

Front Cover
Stanford University Press, 2006 - Literary Criticism - 430 pages
Opening with the revolution-era debates of the 1790s, Borderlines reads Romantic genders across a mobile syntax, tuned to such figures as the stylized "feminine" poetess, the aberrant "masculine" woman, male poets deemed "feminine" or "unmanly," the campy male "effeminate," and hapless or strategic cross-dressers of both sexes. With fresh readings of the works, careers, and volatile receptions of Mary Wollstonecraft, Felicia Hemans, M. J. Jewsbury, Lord Byron, and John Keats, Susan Wolfson shows how senses (and sensations) of gender shape and get shaped by sign systems that prove arbitrary, fluid, and susceptible of lively transformation.

About the author (2006)

Susan J. Wolfson is Professor of English at Princeton University. She is a coeditor of The Romantics and Their Contemporaries (1998) and the author of Formal Charges: The Shaping of Poetry in British Romanticism (1999), which was awarded Outstanding Book of the Year by the American Conference on Romanticism.

Bibliographic information