Figuring Sex Between Men from Shakespeare to Rochester

Forside
Clarendon Press, 2002 - 281 sider
The first focuses on the way 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. The book 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."--Jacket.
 

Innhold

III
3
IV
14
V
36
VI
60
VII
85
VIII
99
IX
115
XI
126
XV
184
XVI
185
XVII
202
XVIII
224
XIX
233
XX
239
XXI
253
XXII
257

XII
148
XIII
153
XIV
170

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Om forfatteren (2002)

Paul Hammond is Professor of Seventeenth-Century English Literature at the University of Leeds.

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