Lyric is onanistic: masturbation is the latent content of lyric poetry. This article counters queer theory with a turn to onanist theory, pointing out the centrality of masturbation to the work of Jacques Derrida, and suggesting that rather than consider masturbation the supplement to sex, we might consider the opposite. Modern man (the gendering is deliberate) has, according to Derrida, been mistaken in his metaphysics by a deluded fidelity to presence, an ontological error to which he has been attached as though to a lover; instead, modern man is guiltily onanistic. This article argues that the apostrophic intimacies of lyric and the longings held therein are masturbatory. To do so it reads Rob Halpern's Music for Porn as a deconstructive...
The article focuses on D.H. Lawrence’s poetry, analysing sexual difference and the interaction betwe...
All representations of sex found in the early artefacts were celebrations of fertility. Sex was by g...
In his famous collection of poems Leaves of Grass (1855), Walt Whitman (1819-1892) celebrates the co...
Explores various sexual metaphors and allusions in Whitman\u27s poetry (especially "Song of Myself")...
This article considers Whitman\u27s Respondez - perhaps his strangest poem. It seeks to explicate ...
This article uses Lyotard’s theory linking the origins of thinking with desire and with the ex...
The article sets out to show how an holistic approach in matters of sexuality is always more helpful...
Explores Kinnell\u27s indebtedness to Whitman by examining Kinnell\u27s prose statements and his p...
What surfaces when we align contemporary raw U.S. homoerotic poetry with shy late 20th-century Brazi...
“Formal Perversions: Queer Poetics and the Turn in Romantic Verse” troubles and redefines the relati...
The Jill Kelly Poems eulogizes a mythic, masculine self, cherishing a Bacchus-like existence while s...
This lecture analyses the relationship between textuality and sexuality in two recent prose poems: ...
In this provocative analysis of Whitman's exemplary quest for happiness, Vivian Pollak skillfully ex...
This thesis identifies a concern with looking in the work of three queer New York writers: Walt Whit...
One of the main objectives of this article is to demonstrate that the onanism discourse is a constit...
The article focuses on D.H. Lawrence’s poetry, analysing sexual difference and the interaction betwe...
All representations of sex found in the early artefacts were celebrations of fertility. Sex was by g...
In his famous collection of poems Leaves of Grass (1855), Walt Whitman (1819-1892) celebrates the co...
Explores various sexual metaphors and allusions in Whitman\u27s poetry (especially "Song of Myself")...
This article considers Whitman\u27s Respondez - perhaps his strangest poem. It seeks to explicate ...
This article uses Lyotard’s theory linking the origins of thinking with desire and with the ex...
The article sets out to show how an holistic approach in matters of sexuality is always more helpful...
Explores Kinnell\u27s indebtedness to Whitman by examining Kinnell\u27s prose statements and his p...
What surfaces when we align contemporary raw U.S. homoerotic poetry with shy late 20th-century Brazi...
“Formal Perversions: Queer Poetics and the Turn in Romantic Verse” troubles and redefines the relati...
The Jill Kelly Poems eulogizes a mythic, masculine self, cherishing a Bacchus-like existence while s...
This lecture analyses the relationship between textuality and sexuality in two recent prose poems: ...
In this provocative analysis of Whitman's exemplary quest for happiness, Vivian Pollak skillfully ex...
This thesis identifies a concern with looking in the work of three queer New York writers: Walt Whit...
One of the main objectives of this article is to demonstrate that the onanism discourse is a constit...
The article focuses on D.H. Lawrence’s poetry, analysing sexual difference and the interaction betwe...
All representations of sex found in the early artefacts were celebrations of fertility. Sex was by g...
In his famous collection of poems Leaves of Grass (1855), Walt Whitman (1819-1892) celebrates the co...