Neo-Victorian Freakery explores the way in which contemporary fiction, film, and television has revisited the lives of nineteenth-century freak show performers. It locates the neo-Victorian freak show as a crucial forum for debating the politics of disability, gender, sexuality and race within the genre more broadly.
Introduction: Distorted images and re-membered bodies: Constructing Neo-Victorian Freakery
1. Mixing (re)memory and desire: Constructing Sarah Baartman
2. Separation Anxieties: Sex, Death, and Chang and Eng Bunker
3. Excessively feminine? Anna Swan, gendering giantesses, and the genre of the 'true life story' pamphlet
4. Innocence, experience, and childhood dramas: Charles Stratton and Lavinia Warren
5. The Strange Case of Joseph and Jack: Joseph Merrick and spectacles of deviance
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Helen Davies is Senior Lecturer in English Studies at Teesside University, UK. She is the author of Gender and Ventriloquism in Victorian and Neo-Victorian Fiction: Passionate Puppets (2012), and has published widely on gender and sexuality in Victorian and neo-Victorian literature.