Headshot of Anne Linton

Anne Linton

Professor
Email: aelinton@sfsu.edu
Location: HUM 535

Please consult your course syllabus or contact the instructor directly for office hours.

Anne E. Linton is Professor of French and Communication Studies at San Francisco State University. She is the author of Unmaking Sex: The Gender Outlaws of Nineteenth-Century France (Cambridge University Press, 2022) and the co-editor of “Photography in the Body in Nineteenth-Century France,” a special volume of Yale French Studies (Yale University Press, 2021), as well as numerous essays on diverse aspects of nineteenth-century French culture. Her recent articles have appeared in Representations, Yale French Studies, Romanic Review, the French Review, and Nineteenth-Century French Studies, among others. Anne holds a Ph.D. from Yale University, where her dissertation won the Marguerite Peyre Prize for best dissertation in French, and an MA in French from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She earned her BA, summa cum laude, from Washington University in St. Louis, with a double major in French and International Business.

Anne’s interdisciplinary scholarship on gender and sexuality interrogates discourses of power across multiple institutions, focusing primarily on the 19th and 20th centuries. Her first book, Unmaking Sex: The Gender Outlaws of Nineteenth-Century France, offers a cultural history of intersex across medical, legal, and literary discourses. It follows both the lives of those born with bodily sex variations in the past, as well as ideas about nonbinary sex during the long nineteenth century. Unmaking Sex was longlisted for the American Library in Paris Book Award, and won “honorable mention” for the Laurence Wylie Prize for best book in French Cultural Studies published in 2022 or 2023. Her second book project grounds literary imaginings of gender crossings within nineteenth-century technologies that were beginning to realize the potential to modify the body itself.