Erotic Subjects

The Sexuality of Politics in Early Modern English Literature

Melissa E Sanchez author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:9th Jan '14

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Erotic Subjects cover

Treating sixteenth- and seventeenth-century erotic literature as part of English political history, Erotic Subjects traces some surprising implications of two early modern commonplaces: first, that love is the basis of political consent and obedience, and second, that suffering is an intrinsic part of love. Rather than dismiss such assumptions as mere conventions, Melissa Sanchez uncovers the political import of early modern literature's fascination with eroticized violence. Focusing on representations of masochism, sexual assault, and cross-gendered identification, Sanchez re-examines the work of politically active writers from Philip Sidney to John Milton. She argues that political allegiance and consent appear far less conscious and deliberate than traditional historical narratives allow when Sidney depicts abjection as a source of both moral authority and sexual arousal; when Edmund Spenser and William Shakespeare make it hard to distinguish between rape and seduction; when Mary Wroth and Margaret Cavendish depict women who adore treacherous or abusive lovers; when court masques stress the pleasures of enslavement; or when Milton insists that even Edenic marriage is hopelessly pervaded by aggression and self-loathing. Sanchez shows that this literature constitutes an alternate tradition of political theory that acknowledges the irrational and perverse components of power and thereby disrupts more conventional accounts of politics as driven by self-interest, false consciousness, or brute force. Erotic Subjects will be of interest to students and scholars of early modern literary and political history, as well as those interested in the histories of gender, sexuality, and affect more generally.

Consistently rigorous in its historical method, exemplary in its close readings of literary texts, and trenchant in its deployment of psychoanalytic theory, Erotic Subjects stands as a major contribution to Renaissance and sexuality studies. * Amanda Bailey, Journal of British Studies. *
an exemplary piece of research a study, which, in brief, exhibits considerable range, shrewd, perceptive readings, and interpretations of literary-historical textual data, and well-informed and intelligent engagement with current critical debates. * Ivan Cañadas, Parergon - Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association for Medieval and Early Modern Studies *

ISBN: 9780199354368

Dimensions: 152mm x 234mm x 25mm

Weight: 431g

298 pages