Outlander, an epic time travel adventure with plenty of history and romance, has hit cable television. And unlike many other shows, this one seems designed particularly for the women. There's a spectacle of scantily dressed men (or rather one kilted man in particular), a female narrator, and fantastic period costumes. More interestingly, both show and books address many issues most series shy away from-breast feeding, abortion, birth control. Role reversals are common as powerful Claire rescues her virginal husband Jamie from sexual abuse. The villainous Black Jack Randall even displays his genitals onscreen in a spectacle for the heroine Jenny to laugh at. On a wider level, the story considers what it means to be a capable woman in the eighteenth century versus the twentieth as Claire explores different models of strength in the two times. Likewise, Jamie comes to understand the nuances of male honor, power, and alternative sexuality through the contrasting models of Black Jack and Lord John. While most characters are white early on, the books introduce the Cherokee and the slavery question with sympathy as Jamie and Claire struggle to improve the world. As the heroes encounter all the complications of a marriage, along with life in their wider community, they make discoveries about gender that resonate with all their fans here in the modern world.
Les mer
Table of Contents Introduction Part I: Questions of Diversity Privilege and Pity: Jamie on Slavery, Racism and Disability (Valerie Estelle Frankel) Culloden and Wounded Knee: Genocide, Identity and Cultural Survival (Sandi Solis) Claire Kens Well: Appropriation and Itinerant Performance in Outlander Onscreen (Elizabeth Elaine Tavares) Part II: ­Eighteenth-Century Masculinity Gazing at Jamie Fraser (Araceli R. Lopez) Jamie’s “Others”: Complicating Masculinity and Heroism Through His Foils (Jennifer Phillips) Being Lord John: Homosexual Life in Georgian London (Valerie Estelle Frankel) Part III: Women’s Choice for Time Travelers Men, Women and Birth Control in the Early Outlander Books (Nicole M. duPlessis) The Beaton: Healing as Empowerment for Claire Beauchamp (Sarah Stegall) Part IV: Claire as Feminist, Postfeminist, ­Anti-Feminist Reviewing Linear Time: History Repeating All Over Again (Now, Against You) (Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns and Leonardo G.A. Lando) The Way We Were: Nostalgia, Romance and ­Anti-Feminism (Victoria Kennedy) Outlander from Book to Screen: Power in Gender and Orientation (Yvonne D. Leach) Appendix A: Book Reading Order Appendix B: Television Episode Guide Appendix C: Television Cast About the Contributors Index
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781476664248
Publisert
2016-07-31
Utgiver
Vendor
McFarland & Co Inc
Vekt
245 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
172

Biographical note

Valerie Estelle Frankel has been a storyteller, an award-winning novelist, and a lecturer at San Jose State University, USA. The author of 40 popular culture books and more than 100 stories and essays, she lives in Sunnyvale, California.