Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Homosexuality in Nineteenth-Century Literature - Evil Women And Romantic Friends


Homosexuality in Nineteenth-Century Literature - Evil Women And Romantic Friends

EVIL WOMEN AND ROMANTIC FRIENDS

Jeannette H. Foster

SOURCE: "From the Romantics to the Moderns," in Sex Variant Women in Literature: A Historical and Quantitative Survey, Vantage Press, 1956, pp. 60-80.

[In 1956, Foster published the first exhaustive study of lesbian content in literature, Sex Variant Women in Literature. The following excerpt presents some of her findings on the nineteenth century, demonstrating the ways in which authorsmost of them French menpresented lesbian characters and encounters.]

The Novel Before 1870

For the first three-quarters of the nineteenth century variant fiction was so nearly an exclusive product of France that traces appearing elsewhere may be left for separate consideration. The first pertinent French item was a typical Romantic Period novel of indifferent literary quality, Philip Cuisin's Clémentine, Orpheline et Androgyne (1819). As its title...

[The entire page is 26153 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: