Identifying Marks

Identifying Marks Race, Gender, and the Marked Body in Nineteenth-Century America

Hardback (30 Nov 2006)

Save $7.14

  • RRP $57.46
  • $50.32
Add to basket

Includes delivery to the United States

1 copy available online - Usually dispatched within 7-10 days

Publisher's Synopsis

What we know of the marked body in nineteenth-century American literature and culture often begins with ""The Scarlet Letter's"" Hester Prynne and ends with Moby Dick's ""Queequeg"". This study looks at the presence of marked men and women in a more challenging array of canonical and lesser-known works, including exploration narratives, romances, and frontier novels. Jennifer Putzi shows how tattoos, scars, and brands can function both as stigma and as emblem of healing and survival, thus blurring the borderline between the biological and social, the corporeal and spiritual. Examining such texts as ""Typee"", ""Uncle Tom's Cabin"", ""Captivity of the Oatman Girls"", ""The Morgesons"", ""Iola Leroy"", and ""Contending Forces"", Putzi relates the representation of the marked body to significant events, beliefs, or cultural shifts, including tattooing and captivity, romantic love, the patriarchal family, and abolition and slavery. Her particular focus is on both men and women of color, as well as white women - in other words, bodies that did not signify personhood in the nineteenth century and thus by their very nature were grotesque. Complicating the discourse on agency, power, and identity, these texts reveal a surprisingly complex array of representations of and responses to the marked body - some that are a product of essentialist thinking about race and gender identities and some that complicate, critique, or even rebel against conventional thought.

Book information

ISBN: 9780820328126
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Imprint: University of Georgia Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 810.93561
DEWEY edition: 22
Language: English
Number of pages: 195
Weight: 440g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 19mm