Masquerade and Gender

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0-271-02582-4
A01=Catherine A. Craft-Fairchild
Addison
Aphra Behn
Author_Catherine A. Craft-Fairchild
Bakhtin
Category=DS
Catherine A. Craft-Fairchild
Eliza Haywood
Elizabeth Inchbald
English
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
female behavior
femininity
feminism
Fielding
Frances Burney
gender issues
Julia Kristeva
Kaja Silverman
Literature
Luce Irigaray
Mary Ann Doane
Mary Davys
sexual freedom
social norms
Steele
Terry Castle
womanhood

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271025827
  • Weight: 354g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Sep 1993
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Terry Castle's recent study of masquerade follows Bakhtin's analysis of the carnivalesque to conclude that, for women, masquerade offered exciting possibilities for social and sexual freedom. Castle's interpretation conforms to the fears expressed by male writers during the period—Addison, Steele, and Fielding all insisted that masquerade allowed women to usurp the privileges of men. Female authors, however, often mistrusted these claims, perceiving that masquerade's apparent freedoms were frequently nothing more than sophisticated forms of oppression.

Catherine Craft-Fairchild's work provides a useful corrective to Castle's treatment of masquerade. She argues that, in fictions by Aphra Behn, Mary Davys, Eliza Haywood, Elizabeth Inchbald, and Frances Burney, masquerade is double-sided. It is represented in some cases as a disempowering capitulation to patriarchal strictures that posit female subordination. Often within the same text, however, masquerade is also depicted as an empowering defiance of the dominant norms for female behavior. Heroines who attempt to separate themselves from the image of womanhood they consciously construct escape victimization. In both cases, masquerade is the condition of femininity: gender in the woman's novel is constructed rather than essential.

Craft-Fairchild examines the guises in which womanhood appears, analyzing the ways in which women writers both construct and deconstruct eighteenth-century cultural conceptions of femininity. She offers a careful and engaging textual analysis of both canonical and noncanonical eighteenth-century texts, thereby setting lesser-read fictions into a critical dialogue with more widely known novels. Detailed readings are informed throughout by the ideas of current feminist theorists, including Luce Irigaray, Julia Kristeva, Mary Ann Doane, and Kaja Silverman. Instead of assuming that fictions about women were based on biological fact, Craft-Fairchild stresses the opposite: the domestic novel itself constructs the domestic woman.

Catherine Craft-Fairchild is Assistant Professor of English at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota.

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