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OverviewExplores Victorian writers' erotic investment in statues Theorises the function of the sculptural body in Victorian poetry and proseOffers thorough readings of sculpture in Victorian texts and contextsExamines a wide range of works by well-known and lesser-known writers of the period (e.g. Thomas Hardy, John Ruskin, Oscar Wilde, Walter Pater, Vernon Lee, Olive Custance, Arthur O'Shaughnessy)Extends the British focus to encompass nineteenth-century European and American writings This book argues that, in Victorian literature, transgressive desires that cannot be openly acknowledged are often buried and encrypted in the marble bodies of statues. Examining sculpture's ubiquity in Victorian galleries and museums, Pulham observes that while touch is prohibited in these cultural locations Victorian texts offer 'safe' spaces where sculptures may be kissed or caressed using metaphors of tactility that work at the intersections of touch and vision and permit the recovery of forbidden love. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Patricia PulhamPublisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press ISBN: 9781399504591ISBN 10: 1399504592 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 18 August 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"By focusing its discussion of Victorian desire through the understudied central motif of touching statues, Pulham offers a turn of the critical kaleidoscope that brings into focus new aspects of well-known works and foregrounds lesser-known writers and texts. She opens the way for new assessments of well-established critical models, from the male gaze to Eve Sedgwick's theories of triangulated homoerotic relationships, and brings together art history, literary studies, and classical reception studies in a fresh convergence.--Laura Eastlake, Edge Hill University ""Victorian Studies"" Patricia Pulham's strikingly original interdisciplinary study expertly guides us through Victorian literature's imaginary museum of sculpture. With characteristic vivacity and flair, she explores the role of statues in the Victorians' negotiation of their own sexualities, revealing how sculptures in nineteenth-century poetry and fiction function as intensified sites of transgressive desire.--Hilary Fraser, Birkbeck, University of London This gracefully written, well-edited interdisciplinary study offers a historical account of statuary and its reception in Victorian Britain. [...] Pulham articulates an original, cogent, and elegant interpretation of the arts of suppression and indulgence [...] Highly recommended.--T. Hoagwood, emeritus, Texas A&M University ""CHOICE"" The Sculptural Body in Victorian Literature is a pertinently thought-provoking text. Its contents are thoroughly researched and productively interdisciplinary, and I do not doubt that the book will prove highly useful to those researching in gender and sexuality studies, museum studies, and nineteenth-century literature and art history for many years to come. Moving forward, I hope that relevant scholars will begin to work on answering Pulham's concluding call for more research to be undertaken into instances where literature, sculpture, race, and/or national identity intersect.--Caitlin Doley, University of York ""British Association for Victorian Studies""" Author InformationPatricia Pulham, Professor of Victorian Literature, University of Surrey. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |