Now available:
In Contempt: Nineteenth-Century Women,
Law, and Literature
by Kristin Kalsem
Available
from Ohio State University Press http://www.ohiostatepress.org/books/book%20pages/kalsem%20in.html
In Contempt: Nineteenth-Century Women, Law, and
Literature explores the legal advocacy performed by
nineteenth-century women writers in publications of nonfiction and fiction, as
well as in real-life courtrooms and in the legal forum provided by the novel
form.
The
nineteenth century was a period of unprecedented reform in laws affecting
women’s property, child support and custody, lunacy, divorce, birth control,
domestic violence, and women in the legal profession. Women’s contributions to
these changes in the law, however, have been largely ignored because their
work, stories, and perspectives are not recorded in authoritative legal texts;
rather, evidence of their arguments and views are recorded in writings of a
different kind. This book examines lesser-known works of nonfiction and fiction
by legal reformers such as Annie Besant and Georgina Weldon and novelists such
as Frances Trollope, Jane Hume Clapperton, George Paston, and Florence Dixie.
In
Contempt brings to light new connections between Victorian law and
literature, not only with its analysis of many “lost” novels but also with its
new legal readings of old ones such as Emily Brontë’s Wuthering
Heights (1847), George Eliot’s Adam Bede (1859),
Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865), Rider
Haggard’s She (1887), and Thomas Hardy’s Jude the
Obscure (1895). This study reexamines the cultural and political roles
of the novel in light of “new evidence” that many nineteenth-century novels
were “lawless”—showing contempt for, rather than policing, the law.
“Kristin
Kalsem’s In Contempt makes a significant contribution to
scholarship on the history of feminist jurisprudence. She covers thorny legal
issues including married women’s property, infanticide, and lunacy law, as well
as birth control, imperialism, and women’s admission to the bar. In her
afterword she urges scholars to engage the ‘new evidence’ she has brought to
light—and I have no doubt that this evidence will be welcomed
enthusiastically.”
Christine L. Krueger, professor of English, Marquette
University
Kristin Kalsem received her J.D. from the
University of Chicago Law School and her Ph.D. in English from the University
of Iowa. She is professor of law and co-director of the Center for Race,
Gender, and Social Justice at the University of Cincinnati College of Law.
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