Renaissance Fantasies: The Gendering of Aesthetics in Early Modern FictionKent State University Press, 1999 - 214 頁 Renaissance Fantasies is the first full-length study to explore why a number of early modern writers put their masculine literary authority at risk by writing from the perspective of femininity and effeminacy. Prendergast argues that fictions like Boccaccio's Decameron, Etienne Pasquier's Monophile, Philip Sidney's Astrophil and Stella, and Shakespeare's As You Like It promote an alternative to the dominate, patriarchal aesthetics by celebrating unruly female and effeminate male bodies. She establishes how, during the early modern period, writers metaphorically associated didactic literature (like the epic) with masculinity, and fantastical or pleasurable literature (like Lyric or drama) with femininity or effeminacy. |
內容
11 | |
Exchanges of Women and Words Etienne Pasquiers Rewriting of The Courtier | 38 |
Effeminacy and the Anxiety of Originality Astrophil and Stella and the Rime Sparse | 63 |
Prose Femininity and the Prodigal Triangle in the Decameron and The Old Arcadia | 82 |
The Truest Poetry Gender Genre and Class in As You Like It and A Defence of Poetry | 113 |
Illusions of Originality | 128 |
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
aesthetics affirm Alatiel Anger aristocratic articulate artist associated Astrophil and Stella authoritative authority beloved Boccaccio boy actor Castiglione castration celebrate Charilée chaste claims conceptualizations constructive conventional court Courtier courtly critics cultural debates Decameron Defence of Poetry desire dialogue didactic discuss drama early modern eclogues effeminacy effeminate Elizabeth Elizabethan employ English Renaissance erotic exogamy fair ladies fantasy fantasy and femininity female audience female character feminized gaze gender genre gestures homosocial ideal implications inspiration Jane Anger ladies language literary Literature lyric male masculine mediation metaphorics Monophile narrative narrator Nashe Nashe's Neoplatonic notion Old Arcadia originality ornamental Orpheus Orphic paradigm Pasquier patriarchal perspective Petrarch Petrarchan Philoclea Philopole Philopole's poems poet poetics problematic prodigal protagonist Pyrocles Pyrocles's readers represent representation rhetoric Rime Sparse Rosalind sequence sexual Shakespeare Sidney's Defence Sir Philip Sidney sonnet Spenser story suggests Thomas Nashe tion tradition treatise University Press verse voice woman writing Zeuxian Zeuxis
熱門章節
第 7 頁 - Only the poet, disdaining to be tied to any such subjection, lifted up with the vigour of his own invention, doth grow in effect another nature, in making things either better than nature bringeth forth, or, quite anew, forms such as never were in nature...
第 11 頁 - And now that an overfaint quietness should seem to strew the house for poets, they are almost in as good reputation as the mountebanks at Venice.
第 10 頁 - Sweet Poesy, that hath anciently had kings, emperors, senators, great captains, such as, besides a thousand others, David, Adrian. Sophocles, Germanicus, not only to favour poets, but to be poets; and of our nearer times can present for her patrons a Robert, king of Sicily, the great King Francis of France, King James of Scotland; such cardinals as Bembus and Bibbiena...
第 8 頁 - ... the meaner sort of painters, who counterfeit only such faces as are set before them, and the more excellent, who, having no law but wit, bestow that in colours upon you which is fittest for the eye to see...
第 13 頁 - ... us great occasion, being indeed capable of any excellent exercising of it. I know, some will say it is a mingled language. And why not so much the better, taking the best of both the other? Another will say it wanteth grammar.