Claire Nally's Steampunk: Gender, Subculture, and the Neo-Victorian is a welcome addition to a growing and dynamic field that has much to add to academic discussions around culture, gender, art, and history ... [Nally] lays a strong groundwork for steampunk to not only focus on its subversive potential but also to engage in its reestablishment of norms and mores. * The Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts *
Nally's valuable study makes clear that Steampunk is a popular culture phenomenon that, like punk, goth and metal has developed both conservative and progressive forms ... Having read Steampunk: gender, subculture & the neo-Victorian, I am inspired to get my students researching the genre, which is what a serious piece of scholarship should do. * Journal of Gender Studies *
[A] timely and welcome reflection on the possibilities and limitations of the mode ... Steampunk is a helpful reference for teaching and research in multiple humanities disciplines and it also engages with and advances debates in gender studies, adaptation, neo-Victorianism, and the study of (post-)subculture and counterculture. * C21 Literature: A Journal of Twenty-First Century Writings *
Nally's study is an important and valuable contribution to the field of steampunk studies, as it expands and reflects on opportunities and dangers integral to the steampunk mode, while also providing a nuanced analysis of material which complements neo-Victorian gender studies in new and productive ways. * Neo-Victorian Studies *
Nally's accessible and engaging interdisciplinary study provides a very welcome new perspective on the various repercussions of steampunk. -- Susanne Gruss, lecturer in English Literature and Culture, FAU Erlangen-Nurnberg, Germany
Looking seriously at material productions-from corsets, to artworks, to e-zines, to graphic novels-she asks questions inspired by intersectional feminism and considers whose identities these reflect, [and] whose interests they serve. -- Margaret D. Stetz, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's Studies and Professor of Humanities, University of Delaware, USA
Nally convincingly demonstrates that we need to attend to the particulars of how steampunk is created, received, and even contested, whether in the form of Alan Moore's graphic novels, the multi-genre persona created by Emilie Autumn, or postfeminist romance. Her boundary-crossing study thus challenges us to rethink our generalizations about steampunk's joy in anachronism and its fascination with Britain's lost empire. -- Miriam Elizabeth Burstein, Professor of English, State University of New York, College at Brockport, USA