"Queer" in the modernist period (1910-1945) means "strange, odd, out of sorts" and although it begins to refer to those who are queer sexually, it does not yet police a hetero-homosexual divide. It means crossing boundaries in unexpected directions, across the Atlantic, across the colour line, across literary conventions that dictate autobiographies can't be written by someone else. Six memoirs that rely on cross gender and cross racial identifications are discussed within their specific cultural contexts so that female ...
Read More
"Queer" in the modernist period (1910-1945) means "strange, odd, out of sorts" and although it begins to refer to those who are queer sexually, it does not yet police a hetero-homosexual divide. It means crossing boundaries in unexpected directions, across the Atlantic, across the colour line, across literary conventions that dictate autobiographies can't be written by someone else. Six memoirs that rely on cross gender and cross racial identifications are discussed within their specific cultural contexts so that female aviators (Amelia Earhart and Beryl Markham), "lesbian" auto/biographers (Virginia Woolf and Gertrude Stein) and male auto ethnographers (James Weldon Johnson and Earl Lind Ralph Werther) begin to "queer" the traditional spaces of modernism.
Read Less
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Very good. Slight Scratches on Dust Jacket Appears unread, may have minor damage from transit/storage. Next working day dispatch from the UK (Mon-Fri). Please contact us with any queries.