This article explicates the eighteenth-century English concept of “chastity” through analyzing the noun chastity, the adjective chaste and the adverb chastely in the Corpus of Late Modern English Texts 3.1. Nine prominent characteristics of “chastity” are examined to arrive at an explication of “sexual chastity”. Firstly, chastity was considered (1) a virtue. Secondly, it often meant (2) virginity or complete abstinence from sex. However, it also referred to (3) marital love. Eighteenth-century authors were more prone to discuss (4) women’s than men’s chastity. Metaphorically, chastity was considered a (5) valuable commodity, and it was discussed in terms of (6) attack and defence, and of (7) purity. Chastity was supposed to characterize a ...
Christian literature concerning sexual and conjugal ethics in the first centuries has a high esteem ...
Abstract This essay will examine the origins and emergence of the crisis that engulfed the propertie...
The sustained images of binding, knotting and tying in Book II and III of Edmund\ud Spenser???s The ...
This article explicates the eighteenth-century English concept of “chastity” through analyzing the n...
This article explicates the eighteenth-century English concept of “chastity” through analyzing the n...
In The Third Booke of The Faerie Queene Spenser characterizes "Chastitie" as "that fairest vertue, f...
While marriage is often presented as a woman???s fate in the eighteenth-century novel, the\ud prolif...
Devotional literature is not merely a literary work, but also an act of uplifting moral life and the...
As its title suggests, Margaret Cavendish's 'Assaulted and Pursued Chastity' interrogates female vir...
Nearly all the ideas, concepts, perspectives, and definitions that have been constructed, appropriat...
It has long been recognised that chastity is a problem in Book III of The Faerie Queene. The problem...
The concept of chastity has not figured prominently in the discourse on sex education or philosophy...
As perennial Christian ideals, virginity and chastity were frequent themes in medieval religious dis...
This study examines the sixteenth-century English Reformation background of Spenser's Faerie Queene,...
Sexual renunciation in the early Church had distinct meanings and motives that differentiate it from...
Christian literature concerning sexual and conjugal ethics in the first centuries has a high esteem ...
Abstract This essay will examine the origins and emergence of the crisis that engulfed the propertie...
The sustained images of binding, knotting and tying in Book II and III of Edmund\ud Spenser???s The ...
This article explicates the eighteenth-century English concept of “chastity” through analyzing the n...
This article explicates the eighteenth-century English concept of “chastity” through analyzing the n...
In The Third Booke of The Faerie Queene Spenser characterizes "Chastitie" as "that fairest vertue, f...
While marriage is often presented as a woman???s fate in the eighteenth-century novel, the\ud prolif...
Devotional literature is not merely a literary work, but also an act of uplifting moral life and the...
As its title suggests, Margaret Cavendish's 'Assaulted and Pursued Chastity' interrogates female vir...
Nearly all the ideas, concepts, perspectives, and definitions that have been constructed, appropriat...
It has long been recognised that chastity is a problem in Book III of The Faerie Queene. The problem...
The concept of chastity has not figured prominently in the discourse on sex education or philosophy...
As perennial Christian ideals, virginity and chastity were frequent themes in medieval religious dis...
This study examines the sixteenth-century English Reformation background of Spenser's Faerie Queene,...
Sexual renunciation in the early Church had distinct meanings and motives that differentiate it from...
Christian literature concerning sexual and conjugal ethics in the first centuries has a high esteem ...
Abstract This essay will examine the origins and emergence of the crisis that engulfed the propertie...
The sustained images of binding, knotting and tying in Book II and III of Edmund\ud Spenser???s The ...