Infertilities : exploring fictions of barren bodies / Robin Truth Goodman.

  • Goodman, Robin Truth, 1966-
Date:
[2001]
  • Books

About this work

Description

"In today's global market, ideas about family, femininity, and reproduction are traded on as actively as any currency or stock. The connection has a history, one rooted in a conception of feminine identities invented through a science interwoven with the pursuit of empire, the accumulation of goods, and the furtherance of power. It is this history that Robin Truth Goodman exposes in her analysis of literary and political representations of female infertility from the mid-nineteenth century to our day."

"Goodman takes Darwin's studies on sterility between species as her starting point, exploring evolutionary science as the intersection of a colonial worldview based on class struggle and the pathologizing of female identities that fall outside of reproductive normalcy. She then examines how Joseph Conrad constructs a vision of feminism as a product of miscegenation, how Alejo Carpentier and Mario Vargas Llosa deploy female figures of miscegenation to recast Latin American literature as "difference," and how ecological devastation in the Brazilian Amazon is envisioned through failures in Indian marriage.

Locating points of conjunction between queer, feminist, and postcolonial theories, Infertilities points to the role of lesbian representation and reproductive politics in ongoing critiques of globalism."--Jacket.

Publication/Creation

Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, [2001]

Physical description

xxiv, 234 pages ; 24 cm.

Contents

Darwin's dating game -- Conrad's closet -- Carpentier's marvelous conception -- Mario Vargas Llosa and the rape of Sebastiana -- The rainforest rape.

Bibliographic information

Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-227) and index.

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatus
    History of Medicine
    TBH /GOO
    Open shelves

Permanent link

Identifiers

ISBN

  • 0816634874
  • 9780816634873
  • 0816634882
  • 9780816634880