Between Men: English Literature and Male Homosocial DesireColumbia University Press, 1992 - 244 หน้า At the time of its first appearance in 1985 Between Men was viewed as an important intervention into Feminist as well as Gay and Lesbian studies. It was an important book because it argued that "sexuality" and "desire" were not a historical phenomenon but carefully managed social constructs. This insight (that actually originated with Michael Foucault) is often viewed as anti-humanist or post-humanist because it argues that men and women are simply the products of patriarchal power relations over which they have no control. By mobilizing Foucault's theories of the history of sexuality Sedgwick re-fashions Feminism and Gay and Lesbian Studies to make it seem as though Feminism and Gay and Lesbian studies are ideally situated to continue those interventions into the history of sexuality begun by Foucault. |
จากด้านในหนังสือ
ผลการค้นหา 6 - 10 จาก 33
หน้า 12
... sense , the polemical energy behind my arguments will be a desire , through the rhetorically volatile subject of sex , to recruit the representational finesse of deconstructive feminism in the service of a more historically discriminate ...
... sense , the polemical energy behind my arguments will be a desire , through the rhetorically volatile subject of sex , to recruit the representational finesse of deconstructive feminism in the service of a more historically discriminate ...
หน้า 14
... sense . It reaches back to an emp- tied - out image of mastery and integration under feudalism in order to propel the male wage - worker forward to further feats of alienated labor , in the service of a now atomized and embattled , but ...
... sense . It reaches back to an emp- tied - out image of mastery and integration under feudalism in order to propel the male wage - worker forward to further feats of alienated labor , in the service of a now atomized and embattled , but ...
หน้า 17
... sense , it would perhaps be easiest to describe this book ( as will be done more explicitly in chapter 1 ) as a recasting of , and a refocusing on , Rene Girard's trian- gular schematization of the existing European canon in Deceit ...
... sense , it would perhaps be easiest to describe this book ( as will be done more explicitly in chapter 1 ) as a recasting of , and a refocusing on , Rene Girard's trian- gular schematization of the existing European canon in Deceit ...
หน้า 18
... sense of women's own cultural resources of resistance , adaptation , revision , and survival . My reluctance to distin- guish between " ideologizing " and " de - ideologizing " narratives may have had , paradoxically , a similar effect ...
... sense of women's own cultural resources of resistance , adaptation , revision , and survival . My reluctance to distin- guish between " ideologizing " and " de - ideologizing " narratives may have had , paradoxically , a similar effect ...
หน้า 23
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เนื้อหา
Gender Asymmetry and Erotic Triangles | 21 |
Swan in Love The Example of Shakespeares Sonnets | 28 |
The Country Wife Anatomies of Male Homosocial Desire | 49 |
A Sentimental Journey Sexualism and the Citizen of the World | 67 |
Toward the Gothic Terrorism and Homosexual Panic | 83 |
Murder Incorporated Confessions of a Justified Sinner | 97 |
Tennysons Princess One Bride for Seven Brothers | 118 |
Adam Bede and Henry Esmond Homosocial Desire and the Historicity of the Female | 134 |
ฉบับอื่นๆ - ดูทั้งหมด
Between Men: English Literature and Male Homosocial Desire Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick ชมบางส่วนของหนังสือ - 1992 |
คำและวลีที่พบบ่อย
Adam Bede apparently aristocratic Beatrix bourgeois Bradley Carpenter Castlewood century chapter context Country Wife cuckold culture D. H. Lawrence described Dickens Dinah discussion economic Edward Carpenter Edwin Drood embodied English erotic triangle Eugene Wrayburn fair youth fantasy father female femininity feminism feminist fiction Freud gender genital Gil-Martin Gothic novel hand Henry Esmond heterosexual historical homophobia homophobic homosexual panic Horner ideological important instance Jasper LaFleur less Lizzie male bonds male homosexuality male homosocial desire Marxist feminism masculinity meaning Misogyny molly houses mother murder Mutual Friend narrative opium oppression person Pinchwife pleasure plot poem political Princess radical feminism rape readers reading relation relationship represents Robert role scene seems sense Sentimental Journey sexual social society Sonnets Sotadic Zone Sparkish speaker structure symmetry Symonds texts thematic thou tion transaction Victorian violence Whitman woman women Wringhim Wycherley Yorick young