Launching Fanny Hill: Essays on the Novel and Its InfluencesPatsy Fowler, Alan Jackson A selection of essays providing a broad range of critical approaches encouraging students and teachers of the novel to consider it from a variety of points of view. |
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Page 254
... tion to render pleasure stale is realized throughout Cleland's text both in the discourse of satiety with which we are now familiar , and also in the increasing role curiosity and novelty come to play in the latter part of the novel ...
... tion to render pleasure stale is realized throughout Cleland's text both in the discourse of satiety with which we are now familiar , and also in the increasing role curiosity and novelty come to play in the latter part of the novel ...
Page 279
... tion " we see the text calling that stability into question . In fact , Fanny Hill would not be legally published in unexpurgated form for over 200 years , when the relation between the text and the ideology it produced could be ...
... tion " we see the text calling that stability into question . In fact , Fanny Hill would not be legally published in unexpurgated form for over 200 years , when the relation between the text and the ideology it produced could be ...
Page 295
... tion of heterosexuality or validate same - sex sexual relationships.2 On the other hand , by portraying a sexual economy that overtly excludes men and in which women experience pleasure anyway , it complicates any claims to ...
... tion of heterosexuality or validate same - sex sexual relationships.2 On the other hand , by portraying a sexual economy that overtly excludes men and in which women experience pleasure anyway , it complicates any claims to ...
Contents
Sapphic Erotics | 3 |
Phallocentric | 49 |
Idealized and Realistic Portrayals of Prostitution In John | 81 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
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aesthetic appears argues attempts becomes begins body brothel Brown calls century characters Charles claims Cleland Cole Cole's common creates critical cultural danger describes desire discussion economy edition eighteenth eighteenth-century encounter England English erotic essay example experience fact Fanny Hill Fanny's fantasy female fiction force French gender gives heterosexual homosexual idea ideology imagination initial interest John kind lesbian less literary literature London male marriage masculine means Memoirs moral narrative nature never notes novel object offers once original pain patriarchal penis perhaps Peter phallus Phoebe pornography position possibility practices presents produce prostitutes published question reader relations relationship role scene seems sense sexual social story Studies suggests taste tion translation turn University virginity Woman of Pleasure women writes York young