1st Edition

Clemence Dane Forgotten Feminist Writer of the Inter-War Years

By Louise McDonald Copyright 2021
276 Pages
by Routledge

276 Pages
by Routledge

276 Pages
by Routledge

This feminist investigation of the works of Clemence Dane joins the growing body of research into the relationship of female-authored texts to the ideology and cultural hegemony of the Edwardian and inter-war period. An amalgam of single-author study and thematic period analysis, through sustained cultural engagement, this book explores Dane’s journalism, drama and fiction to interrogate a range... Read more

Introduction

Chapter 1: Clemence Dane and the inter-war political, cultural and literary context

Modernism and the Middlebrow

Feminist consciousness

Social ills and liberal solutions

 

Chapter 2: women’s themes in inter-war drama

Women in the modern world

Contesting masculine abuses in plays about the past

Interpreting literary history

 

Chapter 3: Imperilled identities and submerged sexualities: romantic pathology in the coming-of-age novel 1917-1927

Lesbian loss: the amor impossibilia

Romantic yearning in heterosexual contexts

 

Chapter 4: Domestic choices: companionate marriage or living as a seule dame. Rejecting romance in gothic and saga writing 1924 – 1938

Fantastical fiction and female visionary experience

Family chronicles: women’s journeys from domestication to professionalism

 

Chapter 5: Subverting the models of golden-age detective fiction

Detectives, villainy and masculinities

Investigative women

Foregrounding the woman’s plot

 

Conclusion

Biography

Louise McDonald received her PH.D. in English on the topic of the writings of Clemence Dane at the University of Leicester. She is currently senior lecturer in English at Newman University. Her publications include: 'Clemence Dane's Fantastical Fiction and Feminist Consciousness' in Ehland, Christoph and Wachter, Cornelia (2016) Middlebrow and Gender 1980-1945 (Brill Rodopi), ‘Softening Svengali:  Film Transformations of Trilby and Cultural Change’ in Cooke, Simon and Goldman, Paul (eds.) (2016) George du Maurier: Illustrator, Author, Critic London: Ashgate and ‘From Victorian to Postmodern Negation: Enlightenment Culture in Thackeray’s and Kubrick’s Barry Lyndon’ in Bloom, Abigail Burnham and Pollock, Mary Sanders (2011) Victorian Literature and Film Adaptation, New York: Cambria Press, She has also contributed articles on Clemence Dane and her work to The Literary Encyclopedia, Volume 1.2.1.08, Baldick, Chris and Childs, Peter (eds.) (2017) English Writing and Culture of the early Twentieth Century, 1945-present.