Neo-Victorian Lesbians on Screen
Sarah E Maier author Rachel M Friars author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Anthem Press
Published:9th Sep '25
£80.00
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Neo-Victorian Lesbians on Screen examines how transmedia adaptations of the long nineteenth-century challenge historical representations of lesbians by revoicing their experiences and altering viewer perceptions, thus blending past and present in complex ways.
Neo-Victorian Lesbians on Screen, by Maier and Friars, argues that the on-screen portrayal of lesbians situated in the long nineteenth century across various countries is at the very least a dual task; the imperative project of revoicing lesbian silence and female companionship is complicated by the lack of and/or complex representation of such women in the past.
In Neo-Victorian Lesbians on Screen, Maier and Friars argue that the on-screen portrayal of lesbians situated in the long nineteenth century across various countries is at the very least a dual task; the imperative project of revoicing lesbian silence and female companionship is complicated by the lack of and/or complex representation of such women in the past. The adaptations, with varying degrees of success, carefully manipulate the gaze of the viewer to illustrate both how crucial the act of looking proves to be for lesbian attachment in these films and how the viewer’s own gaze changes the way the lesbian is represented. Maier and Friars consider the adaptations’ awareness of the audience, and the ways in which the films implicitly acknowledge the stakes behind bringing the lesbian to life, as it were, in visual media. Because screen adaptations disrupt historical distance by literally picturing Victorian subjects via a medium they did not have, film adaptations of novels and biofictions, and original screenplays are challenged by the lesbian subject’s vivid presence on screen. The lesbian is no longer a contained (neo)Victorian presence in the ‘othered’ nineteenth century, but her very existence on screen signals her effervescent modernity, which filmmakers alternately embrace or reject.
“Neo-Victorian Lesbians on Screen explores lesbian representation in nineteenth-century-set films and series, including Tipping the Velvet, Gentleman Jack, and Portrait of a Lady on Fire. Maier and Friars examine how these portrayals challenge historical silences, interrogate the viewer’s gaze, and reimagine the visibility of Victorian lesbian identities onscreen.” —Brenda Ayres, Liberty University, VA, USA.
ISBN: 9781839994555
Dimensions: 229mm x 153mm x 16mm
Weight: unknown
226 pages