Martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of Radclyffe Hall

This thesis explores the depiction of masculinity by one of literature’s most famous female masculine writers, Radclyffe Hall. Chapters One and Two discuss two extremes in the reception of Hall’s work: one a successful poem, ‘The Blind Ploughman’ (1913); and the other, The Master of the House (1932)...

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Main Author: Macnamara, Steven
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55425/
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author Macnamara, Steven
author_facet Macnamara, Steven
author_sort Macnamara, Steven
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis explores the depiction of masculinity by one of literature’s most famous female masculine writers, Radclyffe Hall. Chapters One and Two discuss two extremes in the reception of Hall’s work: one a successful poem, ‘The Blind Ploughman’ (1913); and the other, The Master of the House (1932), a novel that was a commercial and critical failure for Hall. Both ‘The Blind Ploughman’ and The Master of the House depict spiritual, sensitive working class men who are different. While these texts are often mentioned in Hall scholarship, they have rarely been discussed individually. Chapter One addresses the impact of ‘The Blind Ploughman’ and its success as poem/song through association with the war wounded and how this, in turn, influenced Hall’s depiction of damaged/different masculinity and its relationship to homosexuality. Chapter Two explores Hall’s engagement with themes that were also being explored by modernist writers, in particular D. H. Lawrence’s reimagining of the Christ story in his novella, ‘The Escaped Cock’ (1928); the chapter argues that The Master of the House uses Christianity to disguise the homoromantic subtext of the novel. In contrast, Chapter Three explores the more familiar topic of female masculinity in relation to Hall, but instead of focusing on male masculine identities, it presents evidence that Joan of Arc, one of history’s most famous crossdressing women, was a female masculine role model for Hall. The influence of Joan of Arc is present both in Hall’s understanding of her own female masculine identity and in the representation of her female characters. The aim of all three chapters in this thesis is to present a new way of viewing Hall and her work in order to demonstrate that she is more than just a writer of lesbian fiction.
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spelling nottingham-554252025-02-28T14:16:57Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55425/ Martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of Radclyffe Hall Macnamara, Steven This thesis explores the depiction of masculinity by one of literature’s most famous female masculine writers, Radclyffe Hall. Chapters One and Two discuss two extremes in the reception of Hall’s work: one a successful poem, ‘The Blind Ploughman’ (1913); and the other, The Master of the House (1932), a novel that was a commercial and critical failure for Hall. Both ‘The Blind Ploughman’ and The Master of the House depict spiritual, sensitive working class men who are different. While these texts are often mentioned in Hall scholarship, they have rarely been discussed individually. Chapter One addresses the impact of ‘The Blind Ploughman’ and its success as poem/song through association with the war wounded and how this, in turn, influenced Hall’s depiction of damaged/different masculinity and its relationship to homosexuality. Chapter Two explores Hall’s engagement with themes that were also being explored by modernist writers, in particular D. H. Lawrence’s reimagining of the Christ story in his novella, ‘The Escaped Cock’ (1928); the chapter argues that The Master of the House uses Christianity to disguise the homoromantic subtext of the novel. In contrast, Chapter Three explores the more familiar topic of female masculinity in relation to Hall, but instead of focusing on male masculine identities, it presents evidence that Joan of Arc, one of history’s most famous crossdressing women, was a female masculine role model for Hall. The influence of Joan of Arc is present both in Hall’s understanding of her own female masculine identity and in the representation of her female characters. The aim of all three chapters in this thesis is to present a new way of viewing Hall and her work in order to demonstrate that she is more than just a writer of lesbian fiction. 2018-12-12 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55425/1/Steven%20Macnamara%204106907%20Thesis%20-%20Radclyffe%20Hall%20-%202018.pdf Macnamara, Steven (2018) Martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of Radclyffe Hall. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Radclyffe Hall D. H. Lawrence Una Troubridge Joan of Arc female masculinity 'The Blind Ploughman' 'The Well of Loneliness' 'The Escaped Cock' 'The Master of the House' 'Ghosts' Catholicism Martyrdom lesbianism homosexuality effeminacy
spellingShingle Radclyffe Hall
D. H. Lawrence
Una Troubridge
Joan of Arc
female masculinity
'The Blind Ploughman'
'The Well of Loneliness'
'The Escaped Cock'
'The Master of the House'
'Ghosts' Catholicism
Martyrdom
lesbianism
homosexuality
effeminacy
Macnamara, Steven
Martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of Radclyffe Hall
title Martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of Radclyffe Hall
title_full Martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of Radclyffe Hall
title_fullStr Martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of Radclyffe Hall
title_full_unstemmed Martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of Radclyffe Hall
title_short Martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of Radclyffe Hall
title_sort martyrdom and masculinity: ideology and masculine identity in the work of radclyffe hall
topic Radclyffe Hall
D. H. Lawrence
Una Troubridge
Joan of Arc
female masculinity
'The Blind Ploughman'
'The Well of Loneliness'
'The Escaped Cock'
'The Master of the House'
'Ghosts' Catholicism
Martyrdom
lesbianism
homosexuality
effeminacy
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55425/