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The Autobiography of Christopher Kirkland by Eliza Lynn Linton

edited by Deborah T. Meem and Kate Holterhoff

Friends of Eliza Lynn Linton were appalled at how much personal information she divulged in The Autobiography of Christopher Kirkland (1885). In this astonishing work of literary transvestism, Linton adopts a male persona in order to recount her loss of faith at an early age, her sexual relationships with other women, and her disastrous marriage to the engraver William Linton. She told her publisher, George Bentley: "I have put my very Soul, my life into these pages." In later life, she said it as "an outpour no one hears me make by word of mouth, a confession of sorrow, suffering, trial, and determination not to be beaten, which few suspect is the underlying truth of my life."

Linton's biographer, George Layard, described it as an "unfortunate moment" when Linton "conceived the idea of reversing her own sex and that of many of her characters", although admits "when she was born, a boy was due in the family, and it was only the top-coating that miscarried."  Mrs Campbell Praed also described Linton as a "curious mixture ... of the man and the woman". By recreating herself as a tall, handsome man, Linton was able to articulate passionate feelings for women without risking exposure as an "invert".

To the modern reader, with a more enlightened view of gender and sexuality, The Autobiography of Christopher Kirkland in an intriguing autobiography-in-drag. It gives a fascinating insight into the mind of a nineteenth-century lesbian, whose only means of self-expression was male identification. As Deborah Meem and Kate Holterhoff write in their thoughtful introduction: "What she could not openly state or plainly symbolize she told slant, tantalizing readers with her willingness to walk the fine line between propriety and impropriety, convention and bohemianism. In so concealing her own deepest doubts and transgressions, she allows us to see the energetic, striving chiaroscuro of optimism and gloom that made her what she was. Hoist on the petard of contradictory Victorian messages about women, she lived and wrote about these contradictions--a "woman against women" attempting to reconcile her desire for independence with the narrow strictures of her conflicted age."

This new edition is completely reset and includes:
  • Critical introduction by Deborah T. Meem and Kate Holterhoff
  • Explanatory footnotes
  • Contemporary reviews
  • Extracts from Layard's biography of Linton
  • Extracts from Linton's novel Sowing the Wind

You will get a EPUB (648KB) file

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