The five essays that comprise this text are linked by a central problematic: the relation between erotic desire and its corollary, anxiety, and their role in the construction of gendered subjects in Shakespearean drama. Situated at the nexus of feminist, psychoanalytic, and historical inquiry, the essays together are structured by four relationships: between sexuality and gender, subjectivity, transgression, and critical practice. Four bodily figures are interrogated: the Oedipal male, heterosexual body, the fantasized female reproductive body, the male homoerotic body, and the female homoerotic body. Jewels, Statues, and Corpses: Containment of Female Erotic Power argues that the strategies of containment employed in Hamlet and Othello a...
Abstract: Shakespeare wrote “The Merchant of Venice” centuries ago, yet the play offers scope for th...
The chapter investigates the intersections between medical discourse on erotic love and its theatric...
grantor: University of TorontoThe spectre of cuckoldry is invoked in many of Shakespeare's...
The dissertation explores Shakespearean representations of subjectivity. I investigate how Shakespea...
Queer theory has long been fascinated with Shakespeare’s works, finding in them a fruitful environme...
Shakespeare and Gender guides students, educators, practitioners and researchers through the complex...
The purpose of this paper is to analyze the fierce sexual tension and anxiety, toxic masculinity and...
Recent new historicist accounts of the theatricality of power in early modern culture have often neg...
This paper refutes the common interpretation of the sonnets as a revelation of Shakespeare’s h...
Slowly developing since the 1980's, queer theory became a very important sphere of gender studies of...
Slowly developing since the 1980's, queer theory became a very important sphere of gender studies of...
263 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.The introduction examines tre...
263 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.The introduction examines tre...
In the thesis I inquire into the nature of the same-sex bonds in Shakespeare’s comedies. I discuss s...
Reading Romeo and Juliet against the heteronormative grain, I examine the internalized homophobia of...
Abstract: Shakespeare wrote “The Merchant of Venice” centuries ago, yet the play offers scope for th...
The chapter investigates the intersections between medical discourse on erotic love and its theatric...
grantor: University of TorontoThe spectre of cuckoldry is invoked in many of Shakespeare's...
The dissertation explores Shakespearean representations of subjectivity. I investigate how Shakespea...
Queer theory has long been fascinated with Shakespeare’s works, finding in them a fruitful environme...
Shakespeare and Gender guides students, educators, practitioners and researchers through the complex...
The purpose of this paper is to analyze the fierce sexual tension and anxiety, toxic masculinity and...
Recent new historicist accounts of the theatricality of power in early modern culture have often neg...
This paper refutes the common interpretation of the sonnets as a revelation of Shakespeare’s h...
Slowly developing since the 1980's, queer theory became a very important sphere of gender studies of...
Slowly developing since the 1980's, queer theory became a very important sphere of gender studies of...
263 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.The introduction examines tre...
263 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.The introduction examines tre...
In the thesis I inquire into the nature of the same-sex bonds in Shakespeare’s comedies. I discuss s...
Reading Romeo and Juliet against the heteronormative grain, I examine the internalized homophobia of...
Abstract: Shakespeare wrote “The Merchant of Venice” centuries ago, yet the play offers scope for th...
The chapter investigates the intersections between medical discourse on erotic love and its theatric...
grantor: University of TorontoThe spectre of cuckoldry is invoked in many of Shakespeare's...