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Ana de Freitas Boe and Abby Coykendall, eds., Heteronormativity in Eighteenth-Century Literature and Culture (Farnham, UK: Ashgate, 2014). Pp. 219. £60.00.
"Remember: As far as anyone knows we're a nice normal family." Doubtless hilarious to some, the bumper stickers and wall plaques on eBay are not so funny to the queer children excluded, silenced, or sacrificed in order to preserve the so-called normal family's image of itself. it's in the nature of ideology that those processes of exclusion, silencing, and sacrifice are so often themselves invisible or denied. the appearance of obviousness, naturalness, this-is-just-how-things-are, is what gives particular forms of being their power to control-or, at their most extreme, to destroy-the lives of others.
In a world where, as the Scottish lesbian novelist iona Macgregor says, "the dominant class never sees its own boundaries," the work of a collection such as Heteronormativity in Eighteenth-Century Literature and Culture is an important intervention, making critically visible both "the heteronormative legacy of the eighteenth century as a historical period" and the continuing presence of heteronormativity in eighteenth-century studies. As the editors note, the chapters in this volume "set out to reconfigure our sense of how gender and sexuality have become mapped onto space; how public and private have been carved up, and gendered and sexual bodies socially sanctioned; and how narrative conventions have been...