Like sex, Eileen Gillooly argues, humor has long been viewed as a
repressed feature of nineteenth-century femininity. However, in the
works of writers such as Jane Austen, George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell,
Anthony Trollope, and Henry James, Gillooly finds an understated, wryly
amusing perspective that differs subtly but significantly in rhetoric,
affect, and politics from traditional forms of comic expression.
Gillooly shows how such humor became, for mostly female writers at the
time, an unobtrusive and prudent means of expressing discontent with a
culture that was ideologically committed to restricting female agency
and identity. If the aggression and emotional distance of irony and
satire mark them as masculine, then for Gillooly, the passivity,
indirection, and sympathy of the humor she discusses render it feminine.
She goes on to disclose how the humorous tactics employed by writers
from Burney to Wharton persist in the work of Barbara Pym, Anita
Brookner, and Penelope Fitzgerald.
The book won the Barbara Perkins and George Perkins Award given by the
Society for the Study of Narrative Literature.