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dc.contributor.authorHueso-Vasallo, Manuel
dc.date.accessioned2025-06-06T07:01:44Z
dc.date.available2025-06-06T07:01:44Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10630/38911
dc.description.abstractThe advent of Disability Studies as a critical area that aims to explore and re-think cultural and literary representations of the disabled body, has supposed a reassessment of the extent until which the Victorian era has had an impact on the creation of what we consider 'normal'. In his 1995 monograph Enforcing Normalcy, in fact, Lennard J. Davis pointed out clearly that the concept of normalcy in itself is deeply rooted in Victorian social and medical expectations. Following this trend of thought, critics like Martha Stoddard Holmes or Karen Bourier have reconsidered fictional representations of disability and their complexity in relation with several aspects of Victorian literature. In this paper I aim to explore some of these aspects by addressing the previously mentioned relationship between normalcy and the disabled body in Victorian literature and fiction.es_ES
dc.language.isoenges_ES
dc.subjectLiteratura inglesa - S.XIXes_ES
dc.subjectPersonas con discapacidad - En la literaturaes_ES
dc.subject.otherDisability studieses_ES
dc.subject.otherVictorian literaturees_ES
dc.title'Normal' Bodies: Disability and Victorian Ideologies in Fictiones_ES
dc.typeconference outputes_ES
dc.centroFacultad de Filosofía y Letrases_ES
dc.relation.eventtitleII Jornadas Doctorales del Programa de Doctorado en Lingüística, Literatura y Traducción (Universidad de Málaga)es_ES
dc.relation.eventplaceUniversidad de Málagaes_ES
dc.relation.eventdate20-22 junio 2017es_ES
dc.departamentoFilología Inglesa, Francesa y Alemanaes_ES
dc.rights.accessRightsopen accesses_ES


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