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   <dc:title>Feminist Geography and the Cityscape in Neo-Victorian Literature</dc:title>
   <dc:creator>Pettersson, Lin Elinor</dc:creator>
   <dc:subject>Geografía humana</dc:subject>
   <dc:subject>Mujeres</dc:subject>
   <dcterms:abstract>Feminist Geography is a relatively new discipline within Human Geography that&#xd;
undertakes the study of space, place and gender as scholars try to work out how these&#xd;
categories intersect in the production of social identities by bringing together three main&#xd;
issues, namely; the spatialising of identities, the contextualising of the meaning of place&#xd;
to gender and the intersection between gender and other socially constructed categories.&#xd;
Consequently, female subjectivity is a key concern for feminist geographers as they&#xd;
address issues related to woman’s consciousness—how she perceives her own role, and&#xd;
how that role contributes to her identity and meaning. In this paper, I propose that&#xd;
Feminist Geography, as a separate discipline, sets a context-specific framework for&#xd;
research looking into issues concerning place, space and gender. As Kofman and Peake&#xd;
have demonstrated “[Feminist Geography] explore[s] the nature of gender relations, the&#xd;
construction of femininity and masculinity and the relationship between patriarchal and&#xd;
class structures in time and place” (314). Similarly, feminist geographer Doreen Massey&#xd;
draws a parallel between spatial control and social control of identity highlighting how&#xd;
“the limitation of women’s mobility in terms both of identity and space, has been in&#xd;
some cultural contexts a crucial means of subordination. Moreover the two things –&#xd;
limitation on mobility in space, the attempted consignment/confinement to particular&#xd;
places on the one hand, and the limitation on identity on the other – have been crucially&#xd;
related” (179). Taking this as a starting point, my aim is to analyse neo-Victorian&#xd;
contestations of the public/private dichotomy where space is a central constituent in the&#xd;
formation of female identity rather than being a mere backdrop. By taking a closer look&#xd;
at the re-imagination of female urban characters I will attempt to demonstrate how, on&#xd;
the one hand, they trespass imposed spatial limits, and on the other hand, challenge&#xd;
gender roles by inverting the public/private ideology of separate spheres. As Pollock&#xd;
remarks, “[public] territories of the bourgeois city were however not only gendered on a&#xd;
male/female polarity. They became sites for the negotiation of gendered class identities&#xd;
and class gender positions” (70). Accordingly, neo-Victorian novels contextualise&#xd;
gender issues in urban spaces to explore the social construction of space and gender.&#xd;
Taken this, I propose that women’s presence in the streets defied the limitations that&#xd;
were imposed by patriarchal normativity and developed, what Parsons refers to as, “a&#xd;
particular mode of female urban vision” (6). By drawing on the work by feminist&#xd;
geographers, I hope to prove how Victorian women managed to destabilise the&#xd;
public/private dichotomy and assert an alternative female identity to the one inscribed&#xd;
by the Victorian cult of domesticity. Subsequently, I will explore how the spatialising of&#xd;
female identities is portrayed in neo-Victorian literature as mobility and agency&#xd;
converge within the subjective experience acquired through participation in the public&#xd;
sphere to negotiate independence as well as public and private spaces.</dcterms:abstract>
   <dcterms:dateAccepted>2014-12-17T12:57:05Z</dcterms:dateAccepted>
   <dcterms:available>2014-12-17T12:57:05Z</dcterms:available>
   <dcterms:created>2014-12-17T12:57:05Z</dcterms:created>
   <dcterms:issued>2014-12-17</dcterms:issued>
   <dc:type>conference output</dc:type>
   <dc:identifier>http://hdl.handle.net/10630/8595</dc:identifier>
   <dc:language>eng</dc:language>
   <dc:relation>XXXVIII Congreso de AEDEAN</dc:relation>
   <dc:relation>Alcalá de Henares</dc:relation>
   <dc:relation>12-14 Nov 2014</dc:relation>
   <dc:rights>open access</dc:rights>
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