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(Re)gendering Spatial Politics: Museum as Mediating Space in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Writings
Choi, Jimin
Choi, Jimin
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Abstract
(Re)gendering Spatial Politics: Museum as Mediating Space in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Writings argues that public artistic spaces, which were not exactly a woman’s sphere during the time, became feminized through nineteenth-century women’s writings. By portraying how the affective relationships that female characters form with the museum help to liberate them from the tacit domestic limitations, the works of women writers like Anna Jameson, George Eliot, Charlotte Brontë, Dinah Craik, and George Paston opened the space’s inclusive potential. In the process, these works re-gender the spatial politics of the museum and reveal the mediating potential of artistic spaces, where women can re-position themselves in relation to the private and the public sphere. The writings of Jameson, Brontë, and Craik go further in challenging the larger spatial politics between the home and the empire, demonstrating the affective potential of the space in colonial politics. Although museums as an institution had a long attachment to masculine, elitist, and imperial values, representations of museums in nineteenth-century women’s writing show how women staked out their own space in a world that was not in favor of them doing so.
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Date
2023-01-01
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University of Kansas
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This item contains archived web content.
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998946_1.pdf
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- Embargoed until 2173-05-31
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Keywords
Literature, Artistic Space, Gender, Mediating Space, Museum, Nineteenth-century, Women's writings
