Graduation Semester and Year

2017

Language

English

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy in English

Department

English

First Advisor

Kenneth M. Roemer

Abstract

This dissertation offers a feminist disability theory approach to women’s medical fiction during the Comstock Law Era. I argue that, in responding to Comstockian censorship, women authors of medical fiction resisted sexed and gendered narratives in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century sex education discourses, but in so doing, they recast the female body within disability rhetoric. Using feminist body theorists such as Judith Butler, Anne Fausto-Sterling, Emily Martin, and Elizabeth Grosz, I frame each work of feminist medical fiction within a specific historical nexus before discussing how the authors–Rebecca Harding Davis, Louisa May Alcott, Annie Nathan Meyer, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman–rescript the scientific vocabulary at their disposal to shift the concept of disability from one female body to another. I find that although their coding techniques were successful, many authors of feminist medical fiction imitated the very rhetoric of disability they resisted in paternal scientific narratives, and which we have inherited in twenty-first century reproductive health and sex education discourses. Since nineteenth-century women authors of medical fiction anticipate contemporary feminist theorists and disability theorists, studying a genealogy of disability rhetoric in reproductive health and sex education discourses at the fin de siècle opens up a space for imagining how we might rescript scientific narratives in present-day sex education. I call this theoretical move “dismodern feminism,” following Lennard J. Davis’ concept of “dismodernism” which argues for placing disability at the center of postmodern theoretical discourse. Instead of simply using disability as the vector or lens through which postmodernity examines and defines subjects, I suggest using the disabled female body as a starting point for theorizing an intersectional approach to reproductive health and sex education. Authors of feminist medical fiction initiate this conversation not only because they engage disability rhetoric in their literary works by displacing disability from scientific definitions of the female body, but also because this very displacement has cultural implications for actual impaired bodies then and now. Moreover, many of these women authors of feminist medical fiction are well-known figures from nineteenth-century social reform and the American literary canon: Rebecca Harding Davis, Louisa May Alcott, Annie Nathan Meyer, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Yet, their medical fiction texts remain largely unknown and understudied among scholars and students. My project seeks to recover these texts which offer a more nuanced approach to early feminist activism and theory, and further, theorize a dismodern feminist sex education approach which draws from historical and contemporary fiction and nonfiction.

Keywords

American literature, Women's literature, Medical fiction, Feminist body theory, Reproductive health, Sex education, Disability studies

Disciplines

Arts and Humanities | English Language and Literature

Comments

Degree granted by The University of Texas at Arlington

28346-2.zip (1784 kB)

Share

COinS
 
 

To view the content in your browser, please download Adobe Reader or, alternately,
you may Download the file to your hard drive.

NOTE: The latest versions of Adobe Reader do not support viewing PDF files within Firefox on Mac OS and if you are using a modern (Intel) Mac, there is no official plugin for viewing PDF files within the browser window.