Shakespeare, Sex and the Print RevolutionThis book investigates how the sexual element in Shakespeare's works is complicated and compromised by the impact of print. Whether the issue is one of censorship and evasion or sexual redefinition, the fact that Shakespeare wrote in the first century of popular print is crucial. Out of the newly-accessible classical canon he creates a reconstituted idea of the sexual temptress; and out of the Counter-Reformation propaganda he fashions his own complex thinking about the prostitute. Shakespeare's theatrical scripts, meeting-ground fro the spoken and written word, contribute powerfully to those socio-sexual debates which had been re-energized by print. |
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... Women : Textual Authority or Sexual Licence 11 Othello , ÄŒuckoldry , and the Doctrine of Generality 12 Class and Courtship Ritual in Much Ado 13 Honest Whores , or the State as Brothel Conclusion Bibliography Index ISBN 0 485 11495 X ...
... Women : Textual Authority or Sexual Licence 11 Othello , ÄŒuckoldry , and the Doctrine of Generality 12 Class and Courtship Ritual in Much Ado 13 Honest Whores , or the State as Brothel Conclusion Bibliography Index ISBN 0 485 11495 X ...
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... Women : Textual Authority or Sexual Licence 151 11 Othello , Cuckoldry and the Doctrine of Generality 12 Class and Courtship Ritual in Much Ado 13 Honest Whores , or the State as Brothel 173 195 209 Conclusion 227 Notes Select ...
... Women : Textual Authority or Sexual Licence 151 11 Othello , Cuckoldry and the Doctrine of Generality 12 Class and Courtship Ritual in Much Ado 13 Honest Whores , or the State as Brothel 173 195 209 Conclusion 227 Notes Select ...
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... woman's social role provide the focus of this third part . Plays are discussed as they observe not only marital traumas ... women provide for one another . Behind these plays is no canon of classical texts but the great socio - sexual ...
... woman's social role provide the focus of this third part . Plays are discussed as they observe not only marital traumas ... women provide for one another . Behind these plays is no canon of classical texts but the great socio - sexual ...
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Contents
The Shakespearean Reputation | 7 |
Performance versus Text | 14 |
Censorship and Evasion | 25 |
The First Print Era ReaderSpectator as Voyeur | 46 |
Shakespeare and the Classics | 57 |
Roman Rapes | 59 |
Sexual Temptresses | 74 |
Trojan Whores | 99 |
Introduction | 147 |
The Education of Women Textual Authority or Sexual Licence | 151 |
Othello Cuckoldry and the Doctrine of Generality | 173 |
Class and Courtship Ritual in Much Ado | 195 |
Honest Whores or the State as Brothel | 209 |
Conclusion | 227 |
Notes | 232 |
263 | |
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Common terms and phrases
adultery amongst Antony and Cleopatra Antony's audience bawd bawdy Beatrice become Benedick boar brothel Caesar century Claudio Counter-Reformation Cressida cuckold culture Cupid Cymbeline death Desdemona Dramatic Elizabethan English erotic Falstaff figure folio text fool genital gold hath Hector Helen Henry Hero Honest Whore horn husband Iago Iago's Ibid idea Italian Jacobean joke kiss lady latter London Love's Labour's Lost lover Lucrece lust maid marriage Measure for Measure medieval Merry Mistress modern moral Noble Kinsmen offers Othello Ovid Oxford painted Pandarus phallic play play's poem political popular provides quarto queen rape reading recalls relationship Renaissance rept Roman scene sense sexual Shakespeare shows Shrew social Sonnet speech stage story suggests syphilis Tamora Tarquin theatre theatrical Thersites thou Timon Titus translation Troilus University Press vaginal Venus and Adonis Venus's virginity whore wife wives woman Woman's Prize women words