Queering Christopher Kirkland (1885): Eliza Lynn Linton’s “Autobiography-in-Drag”

The life of the famous anti-feminist Eliza Lynn Linton (1822-1898) was full of contradictions, which are reflected in her fictionalized autobiography, The Autobiography of Christopher Kirkland (1885). As the first professional woman journalist in Britain, Linton castigated the emancipated woman. As...

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Main Author: Nathalie SAUDO-WELBY
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2019-06-01
Series:E-REA
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/erea/7606
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author Nathalie SAUDO-WELBY
author_facet Nathalie SAUDO-WELBY
author_sort Nathalie SAUDO-WELBY
collection DOAJ
description The life of the famous anti-feminist Eliza Lynn Linton (1822-1898) was full of contradictions, which are reflected in her fictionalized autobiography, The Autobiography of Christopher Kirkland (1885). As the first professional woman journalist in Britain, Linton castigated the emancipated woman. As a novelist, she drew damning caricatures of women rights supporters, while some of her rebellious women are depicted in a positive, albeit ambiguous, light. Although Christopher claims in the last pages that he “stand[s] absolutely alone”, the character has been constructed throughout the narrative mainly in inter-relational terms, and the story is peopled with positive, partly idealized, spiritual and intellectual godmothers and daughters. The sex reversals in the characters, some of whom may have been partly modelled upon Linton herself, allow her to construct herself as male, to exploit the Bildungsroman plot and to subvert traditionally gendered romance.My analysis will explore Linton’s piece of self-writing from the angle of feminist narratology. Linton’s radical adoption of a male persona creates situations in which the binary divisions s/he endorses as a journalist no longer hold true.
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spelling doaj.art-ea77151e15424310b97cb70ce2d390452022-12-21T23:20:12ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182019-06-011610.4000/erea.7606Queering Christopher Kirkland (1885): Eliza Lynn Linton’s “Autobiography-in-Drag”Nathalie SAUDO-WELBYThe life of the famous anti-feminist Eliza Lynn Linton (1822-1898) was full of contradictions, which are reflected in her fictionalized autobiography, The Autobiography of Christopher Kirkland (1885). As the first professional woman journalist in Britain, Linton castigated the emancipated woman. As a novelist, she drew damning caricatures of women rights supporters, while some of her rebellious women are depicted in a positive, albeit ambiguous, light. Although Christopher claims in the last pages that he “stand[s] absolutely alone”, the character has been constructed throughout the narrative mainly in inter-relational terms, and the story is peopled with positive, partly idealized, spiritual and intellectual godmothers and daughters. The sex reversals in the characters, some of whom may have been partly modelled upon Linton herself, allow her to construct herself as male, to exploit the Bildungsroman plot and to subvert traditionally gendered romance.My analysis will explore Linton’s piece of self-writing from the angle of feminist narratology. Linton’s radical adoption of a male persona creates situations in which the binary divisions s/he endorses as a journalist no longer hold true.http://journals.openedition.org/erea/7606Victorian fictionEliza Lynn LintonautobiographyfeminismantifeminismNew Woman
spellingShingle Nathalie SAUDO-WELBY
Queering Christopher Kirkland (1885): Eliza Lynn Linton’s “Autobiography-in-Drag”
E-REA
Victorian fiction
Eliza Lynn Linton
autobiography
feminism
antifeminism
New Woman
title Queering Christopher Kirkland (1885): Eliza Lynn Linton’s “Autobiography-in-Drag”
title_full Queering Christopher Kirkland (1885): Eliza Lynn Linton’s “Autobiography-in-Drag”
title_fullStr Queering Christopher Kirkland (1885): Eliza Lynn Linton’s “Autobiography-in-Drag”
title_full_unstemmed Queering Christopher Kirkland (1885): Eliza Lynn Linton’s “Autobiography-in-Drag”
title_short Queering Christopher Kirkland (1885): Eliza Lynn Linton’s “Autobiography-in-Drag”
title_sort queering christopher kirkland 1885 eliza lynn linton s autobiography in drag
topic Victorian fiction
Eliza Lynn Linton
autobiography
feminism
antifeminism
New Woman
url http://journals.openedition.org/erea/7606
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