Textual Intercourse: Collaboration, authorship, and sexualities in Renaissance drama: 14 (Cambridge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture, Series Number 14)

Textual Intercourse: Collaboration, authorship, and sexualities in Renaissance drama: 14 (Cambridge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture, Series Number 14)

by Masten (Author)

Synopsis

Textual Intercourse proposes that the language and practice of writing plays in early modern England was inextricably linked to languages and practices of eroticism, sexuality and reproduction. Jeffrey Masten reads a range of early modern materials - burial records, contemporary biographical anecdotes and theatrical records, essays, conduct books and poems; the printed apparatus of published plays, and the plays themselves - to illustrate the ways in which writing for the theatre shifted from a model of homoerotic collaboration toward one of singular authorship on a patriarchal-absolutist model. Plays and collections of plays by Shakespeare, Shakespeare and Fletcher, Beaumont and Fletcher, Margaret Cavendish, and others, are considered. Textual Intercourse illustrate the ways in which methods attuned to sexuality and gender can illuminate more traditional questions of authorship, attribution, textual editing and intellectual property.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 240
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 12 Jan 2008

ISBN 10: 0521589207
ISBN 13: 9780521589208