In Edmund Spenser’s courtly romance, The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596), the anxiety around queenship and power becomes a crucial site where racialization is produced through affect. While white womanhood secures the future of the Reformed realm, a foreign queen emblematizes the threat of infection, which can permeate the commonwealth religiously, culturally, or physiologically. At the point of contact, the strange woman’s embodied difference evokes feelings of wonder and desire that inform early modern racialization. In this essay, I argue that The Faerie Queene’s affective constructions of racial identities provide a productive lens through which a foreign queen’s racial otherness, namely her moral degeneration, sexual transgression, and reli...
Renaissance patriarchy maintained very clear distinctions between what was appropriately "masculine"...
The Art of The Faerie Queene is the first book centrally focused on the forms and poetic techniques ...
The 16th century marked an explosion of interest in “true” accounts of monsters and monstrous births...
“Emergent Discourses of Difference in Spenser's Faerie Queene" argues that Spenser's project of fash...
Edmund Spenser\u27s epic romance, The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596), claims to glorify Queen Elizabeth ...
William Hazlitt noticed that Spenser "pries into mysteries," and that he "has an eye to the conseque...
This article examines views of the tension between righteous wrath and personal resentment in Elizab...
Edmund Spenser spent most of his adulthood in Ireland as a colonial administrator. As a National poe...
This essay examines the Faerie Queene’s use of erotic subjection as a political metaphor for theori...
Lust plays a large role in Edmund Spenser’s famous 1590 poem The Faerie Queene—this much Early Moder...
This thesis focuses on moments in Edmund Spenser???s The Faerie Queene that\ud problematize and rais...
In The Fairie Queene, Edmund Spenser writes an Allegory, of darke conceit using complex imagery. H...
The Elizabethan poet Edmund Spenser published his sonnet sequence Visions of the Worlds Vanitie in a...
When considered in the context of Elizabeth\u27s effort to silence all discussion of incest, Edmund ...
Pastoral idylls and lawless rebels: sexual politics in Books 5 and 6 of Spenser's Faerie Queen
Renaissance patriarchy maintained very clear distinctions between what was appropriately "masculine"...
The Art of The Faerie Queene is the first book centrally focused on the forms and poetic techniques ...
The 16th century marked an explosion of interest in “true” accounts of monsters and monstrous births...
“Emergent Discourses of Difference in Spenser's Faerie Queene" argues that Spenser's project of fash...
Edmund Spenser\u27s epic romance, The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596), claims to glorify Queen Elizabeth ...
William Hazlitt noticed that Spenser "pries into mysteries," and that he "has an eye to the conseque...
This article examines views of the tension between righteous wrath and personal resentment in Elizab...
Edmund Spenser spent most of his adulthood in Ireland as a colonial administrator. As a National poe...
This essay examines the Faerie Queene’s use of erotic subjection as a political metaphor for theori...
Lust plays a large role in Edmund Spenser’s famous 1590 poem The Faerie Queene—this much Early Moder...
This thesis focuses on moments in Edmund Spenser???s The Faerie Queene that\ud problematize and rais...
In The Fairie Queene, Edmund Spenser writes an Allegory, of darke conceit using complex imagery. H...
The Elizabethan poet Edmund Spenser published his sonnet sequence Visions of the Worlds Vanitie in a...
When considered in the context of Elizabeth\u27s effort to silence all discussion of incest, Edmund ...
Pastoral idylls and lawless rebels: sexual politics in Books 5 and 6 of Spenser's Faerie Queen
Renaissance patriarchy maintained very clear distinctions between what was appropriately "masculine"...
The Art of The Faerie Queene is the first book centrally focused on the forms and poetic techniques ...
The 16th century marked an explosion of interest in “true” accounts of monsters and monstrous births...