Lexington Books
Pages: 114
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-66695-024-3 • Hardback • January 2025 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
978-1-66695-025-0 • eBook • December 2024 • $45.00 • (£35.00) (coming soon)
Darby Dyer is adjunct English professor at Texas Woman’s University.
Chapter One
Homosexuality Preceding and During the Victorian Era
Chapter Two
Queering The Picture of Dorian Gray
Chapter Three
Homosexuality in Other Victorian and Nineteenth-Century Texts
Chapter Four
The Modern Period and Homosexuality
Chapter Five
Queering Mrs. Dalloway
Chapter Six
Homosexuality in Other Modern Texts
Chapter Seven
Closing Thoughts and Consideration of Queer Media
"Darby Dyer's A Shift in the Portrayal and Reception of Homosexuality from the Victorian to the Modern Period is a well sourced, unique and interesting analysis of the role of gender, sexuality, culture, and law in these contiguous eras. By exploring the contrasting experiences of queer writers, Oscar Wilde and Virgina Woolf, as individuals, as authors in the public awareness (with a particular focus on The Picture of Dorian Gray and Mrs. Dalloway), and as subjects of the laws and expectations of their times, Dyer probes the gaps between their experiences to posit arguments regarding the repercussions of queer identity and ways in which it shifted (and was sometimes erased) across time and socio-legal perceptions of gender."
— Rita Costello, McNeese State University