Humanities Arts Cultural Stu 0173 - Sex, Science, Vict. Body

Fall
2013
1
4.00
Lise Sanders

01:00PM-02:20PM M,W

Hampshire College
312124
Franklin Patterson Hall 105
lasHA@hampshire.edu
How did Victorians conceive of the body? In a culture associated in the popular imagination with modesty and propriety, even prudishness, discussions of sexuality and physicality flourished. This course explores both fictional and non-fictional texts from nineteenth-century Britain in conjunction with modern critical perspectives. We will discuss debates over corsetry and tight-lacing, dress reform, prostitution and the Contagious Diseases Acts, sexology, hysteria, and other topics relating to science and the body, alongside novels, poetry, and prose by major Victorian writers. The writings of Freud, Foucault, and other theorists will assist us in contextualizing nineteenth-century discourses of gender, sexuality, and embodiment. Several shorter papers and a longer research project will be required.
Culture, Humanities, and Languages Writing and Research
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.