Courting Disaster
Drawing parallels with the #MeToo movement, this book explores how a series of brilliant female authors in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries cleverly used the novel as a vehicle for ground-breaking discussions about consent.
£20.00
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What do #MeToo and Jane Austen have in common? More than you might think. Ever since the novel was invented, women have used it as a platform for sharing ideas about sexual consent. Dr Zo� McGee reveals how Jane Austen, Frances Burney and their now-overlooked contemporaries used their stories to try to change society's mind about rape culture - and to reassure survivors they were not alone.Courting Disaster takes a timely deep-dive into a series of classic novels, comparing them with both historic court records and current events to show that our arguments about consent are not a new phenomenon. With the wit and wryness of a courtship novel, McGee reads between the lines to unveil a quiet feminist movement that still resonates today. Because every novel about marriage is also a novel about consent. In an era that's clamouring for a return to the values of the past, Courting Disaster asks what that would really mean, and whether anyone actually liked it back then anyway.
Additional information
| Weight | 486.7 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 216 × 138 × 25.4 mm |
| Author | |
| Publisher | Manchester University Press |
| Imprint | Manchester University Press |
| Cover | Hardback |
| Pages | 336 |
| Language | English |
| Edition | |
| Dewey | 823.7093543 (edition:23) |
| Readership | General – Trade / Code: K |