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Masculinity, Gender and Identity in the English Renaissance Lyric

Masculinity, Gender and Identity in the English Renaissance Lyric

Masculinity, Gender and Identity in the English Renaissance Lyric

Catherine Bates , University of Warwick
August 2010
Available
Paperback
9780521153751

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    In early modern lyric poetry, the male poet or lover often appears not as powerful and masterly but rather as broken, abject, and feminine. Catherine Bates examines the cultural and literary strategies behind this representation and uncovers radically alternative models of masculinity in the lyric tradition of the Renaissance. Focusing on Sidney, Ralegh, Shakespeare, and Donne, she offers astute readings of a wide range of texts – a sonnet sequence, a blazon, an elegy, a complaint, and an epistle. She shows how existing critical approaches have too much invested in the figure of the authoritative male writer to be able to do justice to the truly radical nature of these alternative masculinities. Taking direction from psychoanalytic theories of gender formation, Bates develops critical strategies that make it possible to understand and appreciate what is genuinely revolutionary about these texts and about the English Renaissance lyric tradition at large.

    • Makes an important contribution to our understanding of gender in the early modern period
    • Distinct perspectives on canonical poets such as Shakespeare, Sidney and Donne
    • Theoretically underpinned argument which can be applied to other European literature

    Product details

    December 2007
    Hardback
    9780521882873
    272 pages
    234 × 160 × 22 mm
    0.57kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgements
    • List of abbreviations
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Masochism in Astrophil and Stella
    • 3. Fort! Da! The phallus in 'What tongue can her perfections tell?'
    • 4. Abjection and melancholia in The Ocean to Cynthia
    • 5. Feminine identifications in A Lover's Complaint
    • 6. The lesbian phallus in Sapho to Philaenis
    • Index.
      Author
    • Catherine Bates , University of Warwick