Deadline: November 30, 2013
Victorian Network is an MLA-indexed online journal devoted to publishing and promoting the best postgraduate work in Victorian Studies.
Victorian Network is an MLA-indexed online journal devoted to publishing and promoting the best postgraduate work in Victorian Studies.
The ninth issue of Victorian Network, guest edited by Professor Pamela K. Gilbert
(University of Florida), is dedicated to a reassessment of the place of the
human body in the Victorian literary and cultural imagination. Rapid medical
and scientific advances, advancing industrialization and new forms of labour,
legal reforms, the rise of comparative ethnology and anthropology, the growth
of consumer culture, and the ever changing trends of Victorian fashion are just
a few of the many forces that transformed how Victorians thought about the
human body and about the relationship between the embodied, or disembodied,
self and the object world.
Nineteenth-century configurations of the body have long been
of interest to Victorian scholars. However, recent years have seen the field
reconfigured by the emergence of a range of exciting new and theoretically
sophisticated approaches that harness the insights of the new materialism,
thing theory, cultural phenomenology and actor-network theory to explorations
of Victorian embodiment, bodies and body parts.
The editorial board are inviting submissions of no more than 7000 words, on
any aspect of the theme. Possible
topics include but are by no means limited to the following:
- embodied experience and the senses
- the body in stillness and in motion: practices of confinement and mobility
- consumerism, fashion and the stylized body
- the body and technology
- bodies of empire and colonialism
- bodies and body parts on display: anatomical museums, ethnological shows, hospital ward tours
- sciences of the body: medicine, biology, ethnology, statistics, etc.
- bodies, sex and gender
- health and illness
- affective bodies and embodied emotions
- labour power and the body as property
- the poetics and aesthetics of the human body
- human and animal bodies before and after Darwin
All submissions should conform to MHRA style conventions and the in-housesubmission
guidelines.
Deadline for submissions: November 30, 2013. Contact: victoriannetwork@gmail.com