1st Edition
Female Physicians in American Literature Abortion in 19th-Century Literature and Culture
Preface
Introduction: The Woman Physician Character and Anglo-American Nationalism
Fearing the Woman Physician as Trope
Abortion and Nationalism
Chapter 1: An "Atrocious Foreign Woman": White Nationalism and the Abortionist
The Sensation of Madame Restell
Embodying the Abortionist
Chapter 2: The Corporeal Legacy of the Abortionist
Abortion and Melodrama
Sensation as White Supremacy
Chapter 3: "Truly Womanly Work": Sentiment and Reform Fiction
Radical Gender in the Social Problem Novel
The "Abominations" of the Woman Physician
Chapter 4: Absorbing the Terror: The Idealized Woman Physician
Curing White Male Nationality
The Woman Physician as Christ Figure
Conclusion: Curing the Sentimental Feminist with the "Doctress"
Genre and Gendered Medicine
Queering the Doctress
Affective Metanarratives
Biography
Margaret Jay Jessee, PhD (University of Arizona, 2012) is Associate Professor of English at the University of Alabama at Birmingham where she is also Director of the Undergraduate Program. She guest edited a special issue of Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Theory, and Culture on medical women in 19th-century American literature and her essay "'Cutting Up Dead Babies': The Literary Legacy of the Woman Physician as Abortionist" appears in Women’s Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal. Her other work has appeared in The Journal of Modern Literature, Nathaniel Hawthorne Review, South Atlantic Review, and in various essay collections.






