Reading Sex in the Eighteenth Century: Bodies and Gender in English Erotic Culture

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Cambridge University Press, 2004 - 261 pàgines
Karen Harvey explores the construction of sexual difference and gender identity in eighteenth-century England. Using erotic texts and their illustrations, and rooting this evidence firmly in historical context, Harvey provides a thoroughgoing critique of the orthodoxy of work on sexual difference in the history of the body. She argues that eighteenth-century English erotic culture combined a distinctive mode of writing and reading in which the form of refinement was applied to the matter of sex. Erotic culture was male-centred and it was in this environment, Harvey argues, that men could enjoy both the bawdy, raucous, libidinous elements of the eighteenth century and the refined politeness for which the period is also renowned. This book makes a significant contribution to the history of masculinity and advocates an approach to change in gender history, one capable of capturing the processes of negotiation and contestation integral to cultural change.

Des de l'interior del llibre

Continguts

Pandoras Box Frontispiece to A New Description of Merryland
1
c 4 By permission of the British Library
14
69
21
Contexts
35
James Worsdale The Limerick HellFire Club c 1736
72
Sexual difference
78
A female body as grotto Frontispiece to Little Merlins Cave
92
Female bodies
102
The Torpedo or I am not what I seem Title page of The Electrical
107
Propagation by the Bud and by the Branch In Great News from
115
Male bodies
124
Space
146
The Peeper or a stolen View of Lady Cs Premises Inserted in
153
Movement
175
Pleasure
199
Copyright

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Sobre l'autor (2004)

Karen Harvey is a Lecturer in Cultural History at the University of Sheffield. She is the editor of The Kiss in History (2004).

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