Homoerotic Space: The Poetics of Loss in Renaissance LiteratureUniversity of Toronto Press, 1. jan. 2002 - 265 sider Sexual politics in the Renaissance dictated a strong opposition to any kind of homoerotic attachments, or discussion thereof, forcing Renaissance poets and playwrights to find other means of representing these connections. In this compelling and intriguing work, Stephen Guy-Bray argues that early modern authors used renditions of Theocritan and Virgilian pastoral, as well as epic poetry, for the exploration and the allusive presentation of homoerotic and homosocial themes. Drawing on the poetry and plays by such authors as Castiglione, the Earl of Surrey, Milton, Spenser, Barnfield, William Browne, Shakespeare, and Beaumont and Fletcher, Guy-Bray investigates how some authors used these classical models to represent homoeroticism, while others found the inherent homoeroticism of these poems to be problematic. Discussing both content and form of Renaissance and Classical literature, Guy-Bray's work engages in an important and frequently heated debate about the history of homoeroticism as well as questions of literary history and the interpretation of texts. |
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... Iliad and the Odyssey and that provide those poems with what we now call romantic interest . In both kinds of poetry , we could also give the name homoerotic space to the gap between the living and the dead , a gap filled with laments ...
Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset..
Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset..
Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset..
Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset..