Desire and Anxiety (Routledge Revivals): Circulations of Sexuality in Shakespearean Drama

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Routledge, 2015 M08 11 - 194 páginas

In both feminist theory and Shakespearean criticism, questions of sexuality have consistently been conflated with questions of gender. First published in 1992, this book details the intersections and contradictions between sexuality and gender in the early modern period. Valerie Traub argues that desire and anxiety together constitute the erotic in Shakespearean drama – circulating throughout the dramatic texts, traversing ‘masculine’ and ‘feminine’ sites, eliciting and expressing heterosexual and homoerotic fantasies, embodiments, and fears. This is the first book to present a non-normalizing account of the unconscious and the institutional prerogatives that comprise the erotics of Shakespearean drama. Employing feminist, psychoanalytic, and new historical methods, and using each to interrogate the other, the book synthesises the psychic and the social, the individual and the institutional.

 

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Contenido

Acknowledgements
containment of female erotic powerHamlet
positioning psychoanalysis and the female
disease desire and representation
Desire and the differences it makes
Afterword
Index

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Valerie Traub

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