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  1. Courtly desire and medieval homophobia
    the legitimation of sexual pleasure in Cleanness and its contexts
    Published: 1997
    Publisher:  Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn

    Cleanness is shown to be unconventionally affirmative of loveplay and other refinements of courtly artifice. Keiser explores the broad intellectual and social consequences of this celebration of late medieval masculine ideals and analyzes how the... more

    Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt / Zentrale
    No inter-library loan

     

    Cleanness is shown to be unconventionally affirmative of loveplay and other refinements of courtly artifice. Keiser explores the broad intellectual and social consequences of this celebration of late medieval masculine ideals and analyzes how the poet's class-specific aesthetic sensibility underlies a theologically and ethically flawed revisionist history of the biblical Creator's love affair with the creation. These limitations shed interesting light on Cleanness's relation to its theologically more complex and structurally more sophisticated companion poems - Patience, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and Pearl. This book is of groundbreaking importance for students of medieval literature and religion, the history of sexuality, queer studies, and gender studies In the first comprehensive study of Cleanness and its medieval contexts, Elizabeth B. Keiser shows how this fourteenth-century religious poem legitimates erotic pleasure as natural apart from procreative justification and thus represents a unique moment in Western culture. She argues that Cleanness sacralizes heterosexual erotic play while condemning male homosexual love as profaning the Creator's workmanship and his nature To situate the poem in the context of medieval homophobic constructions of nature as the basis of sexual norms, this book compares Cleanness's concepts of sexual desire and deviance with those its literary and theological antecedents, including Thomas Aquinas's discourse on temperance, Alain de Lille's Complaint of Nature, and Jean de Meun's Romance of the Rose

     

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    Content information
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 0300069235; 0300157827; 9780300069235; 9780300157826
    RVK Categories: EC 5126
    Subjects: Homosexuality; Pleasure; Sex; Christian poetry, English (Middle); Homosexuality and literature; Courtly love in literature; Homophobia in literature; Gay men in literature; Desire in literature; Literature, Medieval
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (x, 299 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

    1. The Narrative Theology of Cleanness and the Aesthetic Ethics of Thomas Aquinas -- 2. Homophobic Wrath and Paradisal Pleasure -- 3. Educating Love: Nature as Sexual Norm in Cleanness and Alain's Complaint -- 4. The Sexual Ethics of Cleanness and Thomas Aquinas on Temperance -- 5. Revising the Complaint: Desire in the Roman as Context for Cleanness -- 6. Privileging the Feminine: Courtly Revisions of Masculinity -- 7. Homosocial Bondings with God and Christ -- 8. Theopoetic Coherence: Cleanness among Its Manuscript Companions.