Paul Hammond explores how sexual relationships between men were represented in English literature during the seventeenth century. Figuring Sex between Men from Shakespeare to Rochester is built around two principal themes: firstly the literary strategies through which writers created imagined spaces for the expression of homosexual desire; and secondly the ways in which such texts were subsequently edited and adapted to remove these references to sex between men. The author begins with a wide-ranging analysis of the forms in which both homosexual desire and homophobic hatred were expressed in the period, focusing on the problems of defining male relationships, the erotic dimension to male friendships, and the uses of classical settings. Subsequent chapters offer four case studies. The first focuses on how Shakespeare adapted his sources to introduce the possibility of sexual relations between male characters, with special attention to Twelfth Night, The Merchant of Venice, and the Sonnets, and shows how these elements were removed in later adaptations of his plays and poems. Subsequent chapters chart the often satirical representation of homosexual rulers from James I to William III; the ambiguous sexuality figured in the poetry of Andrew Marvell; and the libertine homoeroticism of the poetry of the Earl of Rochester. Paul Hammond draws on a wide range of poems, plays, letters, and pamphlets, and discusses a substantial amount of previously unknown material from both printed and manuscript sources.
Les mer
Exploring the representation of sexual relations between men in English literature of the 17th century, Hammond includes readings of Shakespeare's Sonnets and shows how his plays added homosexual elements to his source stories. He analyses the satirical representation of homosexual kings and the homoerotic poetry of Marvell and Rochester.
Les mer
A Note on Texts and Abbreviations ; 1. Figuring Sex between Men ; 2. Shakespearean Transformations ; 3. Politics and 'Sodomy' ; 4. Marvell's Ambiguities ; 5. Rochester and Restoration Homoeroticism ; Conclusion ; Bibliography ; Index
Les mer
Hammond has written a book about the relationship between reading and desire which is able to think about the affective elements of reading, whilst remaining affectionately faithful to the ipseity and otherness of the texts from which he abundantly cites.
Les mer
'manifests a commitment to close readings which explore the local biases both of language and desire in ways which get to the heart of questions not simply about sexuality but about literariness.'
A major study of both homosexual desire and homophobia as portrayed by seventeenth-century writers Detailed case-studies of Shakespeare, Rochester, and Marvell, and of satire on James I and other homosexual rulers Draws on a wide range of poems, plays, letters, and pamphlets, both printed and in MS, much of it previously unknown By a distinguished seventeenth-century critic
Les mer
A major study of both homosexual desire and homophobia as portrayed by seventeenth-century writers Detailed case-studies of Shakespeare, Rochester, and Marvell, and of satire on James I and other homosexual rulers Draws on a wide range of poems, plays, letters, and pamphlets, both printed and in MS, much of it previously unknown By a distinguished seventeenth-century critic
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198186939
Publisert
2002
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
347 gr
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
139 mm
Dybde
16 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, P, UP, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
296

Forfatter