Violent liminalities in Early Modern Culture is a methodologically innovative book combining the twin disciplines of queer theory and disability studies. It investigates the violence feared from, and directed at, inhabitants of the ‘betwixt and between’ spaces of early modern literature and culture, through a focus on the perpetuated metamorphic states of Shakespeare’s and Spenser’s liminal figures including Lavinia, Puck, and Britomart. With chapters on gender, sexuality, adolescence, madness, and physical disability, Kaye Mc Lelland applies a bi-theoretical lens to interrogate the ways in which being simultaneously ‘neither’ and ‘both’ brings to bear the non-normative disruption identified by queer theory in ways that use binary systems against themselves. For many of Spenser’s and Shakespeare’s characters, the ‘in-between’ state, whether ritually or otherwise induced, transforms the instantaneous binary threshold of the limen into a permanent ‘habitation’. This created space is one of great power that is feared and violently countered by those who would shut it down. Set against the literary history of Spenser’s and Shakespeare’s Ovidianism and festivity, and the historical context of the post-Reformation transformation from a tertiary to a binary model of the afterlife, this volume identifies a persistent positioning of liminal literary figures in proximity to the liminality of the dead and dying, whilst simultaneously tracing the positive ways in which these inhabitants of the powerful ‘betwixt and between’ are depicted.
Kaye McLelland
Violent Liminalities in Early Modern Culture [PDF ebook]
Inhabiting Contested Thresholds
Violent Liminalities in Early Modern Culture [PDF ebook]
Inhabiting Contested Thresholds
购买此电子书可免费获赠一本!
语言 英语 ● 格式 PDF ● 网页 226 ● ISBN 9781000783766 ● 出版者 Taylor and Francis ● 发布时间 2022 ● 下载 3 时 ● 货币 EUR ● ID 8682076 ● 复制保护 Adobe DRM
需要具备DRM功能的电子书阅读器