Masculine Desire: The Sexual Politics of Victorian AestheticismUNC Press Books, 1990 - 276 pages Beginning with Tennyson's In Memoriam and continuing by way of Hopkins and Swinburne to the novels of Oscar Wilde and Thomas Hardy, Richard Dellamora draws on journals, letters, censored texts, and pornography to examine the cultural construction o |
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Page 4
... means for women , Sedgwick has challenged the assumption of earlier gay writers that homosexual existence is necessarily different from and in adversarial relation to other sorts of masculine experience.12 The following study attempts ...
... means for women , Sedgwick has challenged the assumption of earlier gay writers that homosexual existence is necessarily different from and in adversarial relation to other sorts of masculine experience.12 The following study attempts ...
Page 5
... mean discourses that attempt to enlarge masculine capacities for relationships while respecting the boundaries of conventional middle - class patterns of career , including marriage . Although the term " experience " itself is a much ...
... mean discourses that attempt to enlarge masculine capacities for relationships while respecting the boundaries of conventional middle - class patterns of career , including marriage . Although the term " experience " itself is a much ...
Page 6
... mean when one speaks of a homosexual subject ? To this question , no single answer is adequate . But for gay critics , addressing the question means for one thing claiming ( or reclaiming ) the work of important gay theorists ...
... mean when one speaks of a homosexual subject ? To this question , no single answer is adequate . But for gay critics , addressing the question means for one thing claiming ( or reclaiming ) the work of important gay theorists ...
Page 17
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Page 19
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Contents
Tennyson the Apostles and In Memoriam | 16 |
Spousal Love in the Poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins | 42 |
Pater at Oxford in 1864 Old Mortality and Diaphaneite | 58 |
Poetic Perversities of A C Swinburne | 69 |
Hopkins Swinburne and the Whitmanian Signifier | 86 |
Arnold Winckelmann and Pater | 102 |
John Ruskin and the Character of Male Genius | 117 |
Leonardo Medusa and the Wish to Be Woman | 130 |
Theorizing Homophobia Analysis of Myth in Pater | 167 |
Homosexual Scandal and Compulsory Heterosexuality in the 1890s | 193 |
The Subject of Sexual Indifference | 218 |
Notes | 224 |
246 | |
263 | |
272 | |
The New Chivalry and Oxford Politics | 147 |
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A. C. Swinburne aesthetic Anactoria androgynous Apollo argues Arnold artist associated beauty bodily body Carlyle century chap chapter Christ Christian Cleveland Street scandal contemporary context criticism culture death DeLaura Demeter Denys Diaphaneitè difference Dionysus discourse discussion earlier edition erotic essay experience expression female feminine figure gender genital Gerard Manley Hopkins Greek Hallam hermaphrodite homophobia homosexual homosocial Hopkins's Ibid ideal instance John Ruskin Jowett Labouchère later Leonardo lesbian letter Liberal male friendship male homosexual male homosocial male-male desire male-male sexual manly marriage masculine medieval Medusa Memoriam Milnes mind Monsman moral Moreover myth Old Mortality Oxford passage Persephone poem poet poetry political Quoted refers relation religious Renaissance rhetoric Rose La Touche Sappho scandal Sedgwick sense Simeon Solomon social sodomy Solomon suggests Swinburne Swinburne's Symonds Tennyson tion tradition Victorian Walter Pater Whitman Wilde Winckelmann woman women writing young
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Page 14 - Mankind can hardly be too often reminded, that there was once a man named Socrates, between whom and the legal authorities and public opinion of his time there took place a memorable collision. Born in an age and country abounding in individual greatness, this man has been handed down to us by those who best knew both him and the age, as the most virtuous man in it...