CORE
CO
nnecting
RE
positories
Services
Services overview
Explore all CORE services
Access to raw data
API
Dataset
FastSync
Content discovery
Recommender
Discovery
OAI identifiers
OAI Resolver
Managing content
Dashboard
Bespoke contracts
Consultancy services
Support us
Support us
Membership
Sponsorship
Research partnership
About
About
About us
Our mission
Team
Blog
FAQs
Contact us
Community governance
Governance
Advisory Board
Board of supporters
Research network
Innovations
Our research
Labs
research
Obscurity and Gender Resistance in Patricia Duncker's James Miranda Barry
Authors
Butler Judith
Butler Judith
+14 more
Duncker Patricia
Duncker Patricia
Eugenides Jeffrey
Garber Marjorie
Halberstam Judith
Halberstam Judith
Holmes Rachel
Jana Funke
Kay Jackie
Love Heather
Mahmood Saba
Spivak Gayatri Chakravorty
Vicinus Martha
Woolf Virginia
Publication date
1 December 2012
Publisher
'Informa UK Limited'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
publication-status: Submittedtypes: Article© 2012 by Taylor & FrancisSince his death in 1865, military surgeon James Barry has alternately been classified as a cross-dressing woman or as an intersexed individual. Patricia Duncker’s novel James Miranda Barry (1999) poses an important challenge to such readings, as it does not reveal any foundational truth about Barry’s sex. Resting on obscurity rather than revelation, the text frustrates the desire to know the past in terms of gender binaries and stable sexual identity categories. Drawing on feminist and queer theorisations of the relation between gender and time, this essay demonstrates that Duncker’s use of obscurity opens up alternative strategies of gender resistance.The Wellcome Trus
Similar works
Full text
Open in the Core reader
Download PDF
Available Versions
Supporting member
Open Research Exeter
See this paper in CORE
Go to the repository landing page
Download from data provider
oai:ore.exeter.ac.uk:10871/142...
Last time updated on 15/12/2013
Crossref
See this paper in CORE
Go to the repository landing page
Download from data provider
info:doi/10.1080%2F13825577.20...
Last time updated on 11/12/2019