Sodomy and Interpretation: Marlowe to MiltonA wide-ranging account of the significance of sodomy in the rich discourse of early modern England from 1590 to 1660. The author sets for a challenging reinterpretation of the historicity of homosexuality, reading a variety of Renaissance texts in the light of the work of such contemporary theorists as Foucault, Kristeva, Deleuze, Guattari, Hocquenghem, Derrida, and Althusser. -- adapted from back cover |
Common terms and phrases
allusion argument articulation Barnfield's becomes Belial blazon body politic canon catamite Christopher Marlowe claims construction critical culture debate demonstrates desire discourse eclogue Edward Edward II Elizabethan encoded English epistemology erotic eroticism Essays example exegesis Faunus fleshly Ganymede Gaveston gender genre glosses hath Hero and Leander heteroerotic Hobbes's homo homoerotic homoeroticism homosexual I.iii icism inscribed intersection John Jonson king language Literary London loue lust male Marlowe Marlowe's poem marriage Marston metaphor metaphysics Milton Mortimer narrative nature Paradise Regained pastoral patrilineal Patroclus play poet poetic poetry position praxis precept present Pyrocles realm Renaissance Renaissance sodomy rhetoric Rigby Satan satire Sejanus sequence sexual difference sexual meaning Shakespeare's Sonnets Sidney Sidney's social sodomy sonnet 20 specific speech Spenser strategy structure suggests temporal temptation textual Theocritus theory Thersites Thomas tion tradition trans Troilus and Cressida Ulysses Virgil woman words York
References to this book
Homosexual Desire in Shakespeare's England: A Cultural Poetics Bruce R. Smith No preview available - 1995 |