CALL FOR
SUBMISSIONS
Special Issue "Gender and the Law in
Nineteenth-Century England"(Summer 2012) Deadline for Submissions: May 15,
2012
The nineteenth century was a period rife with
watershed moments in the history of law and gender in England. It is also a
period marked by contradictions: legislation that granted women greater rights
under the law took place in fits and starts, and was never unaccompanied by
cultural and social backlash. The period began, in 1801, with a national census
that revealed women outnumbered men by 400,000, and ended with the repeal of
the discriminatory Contagious Diseases Acts (1866) and the passage of the First
Married Woman's Property Act (1870). Debates about the relationship between
women and the law, and their attendant questions (e.g. Were women legal
persons? Could they be?), permeated the legislation, court cases, newspapers,
serials, and novels of the day. The roles, and legal power, of English men were
also in flux during the period. The rise of industrialism, as well as the
middle class, challenged the masculinity of the landed and leisured male
aristocrat. Laws that!
granted women greater rights in marriage, divorce,
and ownership of earnings and property served to challenge the centrality of
the male patriarch in traditional family structures. In turn, masculinity
became increasingly defined by both state-sponsored and independent imperial
ventures in the colonies. And by the end of the nineteenth century, a new
version of manhood came into being. The rise of the aesthetes, as represented
by the publicity surrounding Oscar Wilde, and the criticism of the aesthetes, as
symbolized by his rather public trial, serve as the most infamous example of
events that brought to light growing anxieties about masculinity, sexuality,
and the law.
This special issue of NCGS invites scholars from
across the arts and humanities to contribute their work on the intersections
between law, gender, femininity, masculinity, and sexuality. Topics that might
be addressed include:
·Queen Victoria
·Marriage, Motherhood, and/or Families (including
the Child Custody Act, the Matrimonial Causes Act, and the Married Woman's
Property Act
·Governesses and their relationship to legal
families
·Property and inheritance
·Authorship and the International Copyright Act
·Education (including the establishment of Queen's
College, London; Bedford College; and Girton College)
·The "odd" women (singletons)
·Women and reform movements (including the Voting
Act and the Equal Franchise Act)
·Labor laws (including the Ashley's Mines Act and
the Factory Acts)
·Health Care and the Contagious Diseases Act
·Criminal Justice (including Prostitution, Sodomy
Trials, and Prisons)
·Imperialism, colonialism, and gender
·Masculinities
· Performance
Please send complete papers (of between 5,000 and
8,000 words) electronically for consideration to the guest editors of the
special issue (Prof. Katherine Gilbert and Prof. Julia Chavez) at the following
email addresses: kgilbert@drury.edu
and JChavez@stmartin.edu
Deadline for submissions: May 15, 2012
Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies is a
peer-reviewed, online journal committed to publishing insightful and innovative
scholarship on gender studies and nineteenth-century British literature, art
and culture. The journal is a collaborative effort that brings together
scholars from a variety of universities to create a unique voice in the field.
We endorse a broad definition of gender studies and welcome submissions that
consider gender and sexuality in conjunction with race, class, place and
nationality. Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies publishes two regular issues a
year, in addition to a specially-themed summer issue, and accepts submissions
year-round.
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