If we consider the representation of the body in the epic-romances of Torquato Tasso, Philip Sidney, and Edmund Spenser, certain instances of wounding and laceration emerge as crucial turning points in the development of their respective narratives: Clorinda’s redemptive mutilation, Parthenia’s blood-drenched pallor, Amavia’s disquieting suicide, Venus’s insatiable orifice, Amoret’s “perfect hole.” This thesis affords a detailed comparative study of such passages, contending that the wound assumed a critical metaphoric dimension in sixteenth-century epic-romance literature, particularly in relation to the perceived association between body condition and erotic desire. Along with its function as a marker of martial valor and somatic sacred...
In adapting the epic genre to Christianity, early modern poets replaced the multiple, capricious god...
The chapter investigates the intersections between medical discourse on erotic love and its theatric...
In his account of the contest between Pallas and Arachne, Ovid described the latter’s woven work as ...
"Written with Teares" studies two romances--Edmund Spenser's "The Faerie Queene" and Sir Philip Sidn...
In The Fairie Queene, Edmund Spenser writes an Allegory, of darke conceit using complex imagery. H...
As an impressionable master\u27s candidate years ago, I was intrigued by a challenge from a professo...
This dissertation, “The Wound that Makes Whole: Bleeding and Intersubjectivity in Middle English Rom...
Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher use the emblem of the wounded heart to dramatize a penetrative mo...
As epic was considered a culturally comprehensive genre, so Spenser's Faerie Queene and Milton's Par...
William Hazlitt noticed that Spenser "pries into mysteries," and that he "has an eye to the conseque...
This chapter investigates the presence of the wound in Shakespeare’s Roman plays, seen as a coherent...
Notwithstanding the extensive research done on Ovid’s Metamorphoses, only a few scholars have attemp...
The Elizabethan poet Edmund Spenser published his sonnet sequence Visions of the Worlds V...
In this thesis, I explore the construction of female erotic desire in Ovid’s work as it is represent...
Poison and Disease in Anglo-Saxon Medicine and Metaphor bridges a gap between scholarship on medieva...
In adapting the epic genre to Christianity, early modern poets replaced the multiple, capricious god...
The chapter investigates the intersections between medical discourse on erotic love and its theatric...
In his account of the contest between Pallas and Arachne, Ovid described the latter’s woven work as ...
"Written with Teares" studies two romances--Edmund Spenser's "The Faerie Queene" and Sir Philip Sidn...
In The Fairie Queene, Edmund Spenser writes an Allegory, of darke conceit using complex imagery. H...
As an impressionable master\u27s candidate years ago, I was intrigued by a challenge from a professo...
This dissertation, “The Wound that Makes Whole: Bleeding and Intersubjectivity in Middle English Rom...
Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher use the emblem of the wounded heart to dramatize a penetrative mo...
As epic was considered a culturally comprehensive genre, so Spenser's Faerie Queene and Milton's Par...
William Hazlitt noticed that Spenser "pries into mysteries," and that he "has an eye to the conseque...
This chapter investigates the presence of the wound in Shakespeare’s Roman plays, seen as a coherent...
Notwithstanding the extensive research done on Ovid’s Metamorphoses, only a few scholars have attemp...
The Elizabethan poet Edmund Spenser published his sonnet sequence Visions of the Worlds V...
In this thesis, I explore the construction of female erotic desire in Ovid’s work as it is represent...
Poison and Disease in Anglo-Saxon Medicine and Metaphor bridges a gap between scholarship on medieva...
In adapting the epic genre to Christianity, early modern poets replaced the multiple, capricious god...
The chapter investigates the intersections between medical discourse on erotic love and its theatric...
In his account of the contest between Pallas and Arachne, Ovid described the latter’s woven work as ...