When literature takes you by surprise: or the case against trigger warnings

The strong emotional connections and resonances of literature can happen at any time.
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It was an ordinary lecture to first-year students, on “Women Writers and Modernism.” My brief was to introduce the different ways men and women responded to the social, intellectual and artistic challenges of the modernist movement.

This is a subject about the literature of the early 20th century, but it tackles some difficult social questions too. While men were facing the horrors of war, the challenges of industrialisation and the disruption of many familiar intellectual and social hierarchies, women were gaining access to education, greater participation in the democratic process, and fuller employment.

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Stephanie Trigg
About the Author
Stephanie Trigg is Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor of English Literature at the University of Melbourne and a Chief Investigator with the Australian Research Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions. She is author of several studies of Australian parliamentary practice and of Shame and Honor: A Vulgar History of the Order of the Garter (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012). She researches in the area of medieval literature, English and Australian literature, medievalism and the history of emotions.