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Gone Feral: Unruly Women and the Undoing of Normative Femininity





Price: $39.95

Page Count: 280

Publication Date: March 2025

ISBN: 978-1-77258-533-9

Gone Feral: Unruly Women and the Undoing of Normative Femininity is an edited collection that probes the concept of ferality as it relates to and intersects with traditional, patriarchal dictates of normative femininity. The collection, appropriately, is a creative hodge-podge of feral representations and enactments that span multiple disciplines and social and existential dimensions and utilizes textual and intertextual analysis, creative non-fiction, feminist theory, critical animal studies, literature, media analysis, poetry, and artwork to explore the complex and contradictory nature of ferality as it exists within, outside, and on the margins of patriarchal culture. Ultimately, the collection seeks to understand and showcase how the concept of ferality may be understood as an inevitable consequence of, and potential resistance to, patriarchal culture and the dictates of normative femininity that have long snared feminine potential, caged feminine spirits, and neutered feminine authenticity.

Gone Feral is a compelling exploration of the untamed, the monstrous, and the transformative power of wildness as it intersects with femininity. Blending rigorous scholarship with evocative storytelling, and richly illustrated with vibrant color images, this book invites readers to not just engage intellectually but to feel the raw power of its arguments. The concept of ferality is explored across social, cultural, literary, and existential dimensions, revealing how it redefines norms around gender, motherhood, and autonomy. By turns infuriating, shocking, and profoundly moving, Gone Feral pushes the boundaries of gender studies and feminist thought. It is a bold, essential read that calls on readers to reconsider the meanings of unruliness, resistance, and liberation in a constrained and constraining world.

- Dr Veronica Frigeni, Visiting Scholar in Gender Studies, Central European University and Centre for Feminist Research, York University

Gone Feral takes an original, fresh, and convincing concept and executes it marvellously: it attends to the concept and lived experience of ferality in order to expose the consequences of being hemmed in by the restrictive idea(l)s of patriarchal domesticity. It probes notions of agency, liminality, liberation, and trauma recovery, among others. The inclusion of analytical chapters as well as artwork and genre-bending pieces makes this collection an outstanding resource not only for students and scholars but for anyone wishing to understand a so-far underexplored aspect of womanhood.

- Zsuzsanna Lénárt-Muszka, assistant professor, University of Debrecen; co-editor of the upcoming Contemporary Maternal Subjectivities on the Page and on the Screen (Sciendo-De Gruyter Brill, 2027).

Gone Feral initiates the necessary work of integrating the maternal into the contemporary movement of feral feminism. The interdisciplinary nature of the collection, including art, photography, and poetry alongside scholarship in art history, psychoanalysis, history, film studies, and literary analysis, presents readers with a rich, engaging exploration of women reclaiming wildness, challenging normative and patriarchal norms of gender and maternity, and finding expression through creative and artistic forms.

- Christa Baiada, Associate Professor of English, City University of New York

Introduction
Enactments:
1. Taken by the Others – The Danger of Being Feral, Martina Cleary
2. From ‘Harlots’ to ‘Irresponsible’ Economic Citizens: Shifting Discourses on Sole
Mothers, Emily Wolfinger
3. Gone Spielreinian: Maternal Ferality and the Suprahumanities, Jessica Spring Weappa
4. Three Little Witches, Hillary Di Menna
5. Selected Poetry, Joy Domingo
6. Feral Itch, Caroline Carey
7. Mothers Born Feral, Teela Tomassetti
8. The Mess House: Wildness in the Domestic Realm, Batya Weinbaum

Representations
1. Alexandra Carter: NEED TO ADD HER INTRO SENTENCES.
2. Strike a Pose, Catherine Moeller
3. From Bold, Going Feral: Xiao Lu's Feminist Art and Ferality, Li Yang
4. Selected Poetry, Victoria Smits
5. Unfaithful Domestics: Ferality and Domestic Disorder in John McPhereson’s Strays
(1991), Casey O’Reilly-Conlin
6. Releasing the (m)Other within: Jeanette Winterson’s Feral Journey from Oranges Are
Not The Only Fruit to Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal, Else Werring
7. From Pig to Dog: Becoming Woman/Becoming Mother, Laura Bissell
8. Gone Feral: Deviant Mothers, Defective Mothering, and the Undoing of Normative
Motherhood in Katixa Agirre’s Mothers Don’t and Yewande B. Omotoso’s Unusual Grief,
Andrea O’Reilly

Dr. Andrea O’Reilly is internationally recognized as the founder of Motherhood Studies (2006) and its subfield Maternal Theory (2007), and creator of Matricentric Feminism, a feminism for and about mothers (2016) and Matricritics, a literary theory and practice for a reading of mother-focused texts (2021). She is full professor in the School of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies at York University, founder/editor-in-chief of the Journal of the Motherhood Initiative and publisher of Demeter Press. She is co-editor/editor of thirty plus books on many motherhood topics including: Maternal Theory, Feminist Mothering, Young Mothers, Monstrous Mothers, Maternal Regret, Normative Motherhood, Mothers and Sons, Mothers and Daughters, Maternal Texts. Her 2024 titles include Care(ful) Relationships between Mothers and the Caregivers They Hire, The Mother Wave; Theorizing, Enacting, and Representing Matricentric Feminism; and The Missing Mother. She is author of four monographs including Matricentric Feminism: Theory Activism, Practice, the 2nd Edition (2021) and In (M)otherwords; Writings on Mothering and Motherhood, 2009-2024 (2024). She has published 15 chapters on 30 post 2010 novels/memoirs that will soon be published in the monograph Matricritics as Literary Theory and Criticism: Reading the Maternal in Post-2010 Women’s Narratives. She has received more than 1.5 million dollars in funding for her research projects including her current one on Millennial Mothers.

Casey O’Reilly-Conlin has a Bachelor’s Degree in Women’s Studies and a Master’s degree in Environmental Studies. She resides in Toronto, Ontario with her partner and cat.