'You and I are humans, and there is something complicated between us”: Untamed and Queering the Heterosexual Historical Romance
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 23:09authored byMcAlister, J
Anna Cowan’s Untamed was one of the most discussed and reviewed historical romance releases of 2013. It was a polarising, unusual text, particularly due to its hero: a bisexual cross-dressing duke who passes as a woman for more than half the book. While it adheres to the structure and many of the tropes of what we might think of as a typical heterosexual historical romance, it is also recognisably queer. Untamed is a text preoccupied with the rigid becoming fluid. In this article, I will explore its queerness by reading it alongside Georgette Heyer’s The Masqueraders, which also features a cross-dressing hero. I will draw on David Halperin’s explication of the word “queer” to explore three key aspects of Untamed: the ways in which it approaches gender, social roles, and history, and how these contribute to the book’s project of fluidity. I will also examine online reviews of the book to examine how readers reacted to Untamed’s attempt to queer the straight romance: is this something for which there is an appetite? If so, what does this mean for historical romance in the future?
History
Publication title
Journal of Popular Romance Studies
Volume
5
Pagination
1-21
ISSN
2159-4473
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
International Association for the Study of Popular Romance
Place of publication
United States
Rights statement
Copyright 2016 Journal of Popular Romance Studies
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in language, communication and culture