Heaven and the Flesh
Do angels make love? Will the souls of ordinary people feel sexual pleasure in the next world? Is the aspiration to spiritual salvation helped or hindered by sexual experience? In Heaven and the Flesh Clive Hart and Kay Stevenson explore the opinions of poets and painters on such questions, from the high Renaissance to the birth of romanticism. Hart and Stevenson analyse the work not only of canonical writers and artists, such as Milton and Michelangelo, but also of lesser-known figures such as John Gore and Richard Tompson, and the sometimes anguished speculations of philosophers and theologians. As the evidence of witty pornographic poems and drawings demonstrates, the relationship between sexual desire and spiritual ascension was not always treated with full seriousness. This wide-ranging survey offers sometimes surprising insights into material both familiar and unfamiliar.
- First study of the relationship between sexual desire and spiritual ascension in writing and art
- Interdisciplinary approach, wide range of material, broad chronological parameters - wide-ranging appeal
- Copiously illustrated text: thorough visual and textual treatment of subject
Product details
August 2008Paperback
9780521070942
256 pages
244 × 170 × 14 mm
0.41kg
50 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Sexuality and ascension - finding the way
- 2. The woman on top - Christ, Endymion, Ganymede
- 3. Paradisiacal bosoms
- 4. Imparadised in one another's arms
- 5. Heaven and the flesh
- 6. The body and ascension in the sacred rococo art of southern Germany and Austria
- 7. The assumption and its transformations
- 8. Conclusion - Jacob's ladder and Keats's Endymion
- Appendix.