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A time travel epic featuring history and romance, Outlander--unlike most adventure series--is aimed at women audiences. The kilted male characters, the female narrator, the fantastic period costumes are atypical of male-gendered television. Both the show and the novels on which it is based address issues most series shy away from, like breast feeding, abortion and birth control. Role reversals are common--the powerful Claire rescues her virginal husband Jamie from sexual abuse. When the villainous Black Jack Randall displays his genitals to the heroine Jenny, she laughs.This collection of new essays examines Outlander as an exploration of what it means to be a capable 18th century woman and what it means in the modern world. As Claire explores different models of strength in both periods, Jamie comes to understand the nuances of male honor, power and alternative sexuality through the contrasting figures of Black Jack and Lord John. As the heroes negotiate the complications of marriage and life, they make discoveries about gender that resonate with modern audiences.
Valerie Estelle Frankel teaches English at Mission College and San Jose City College. The author of more than 90 popular culture books and more than 100 stories and essays, she lives in Sunnyvale, California.
Table of ContentsIntroductionPart I: Questions of DiversityPrivilege 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 MasculinityGazing 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 TravelersMen, 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-FeministReviewing 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 OrderAppendix B: Television Episode GuideAppendix C: Television CastAbout the ContributorsIndex