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What is sex exactly? Does everyone agree on a definition? And does that definition hold when considering literary production in other times and places? Sex before Sex makes clear that we cannot simply transfer our contemporary notions of what constitutes a sex act into the past and expect them to be true for the people who were then reading literature and watching plays. The contributors confront how our current critical assumptions about definitions of sex restrict our understanding of representations of sexuality in early modern England. Drawing attention to overlooked forms of sexual activity in early modern culture, from anilingus and interspecies sex to “chin-chucking” and convivial drinking, Sex before Sex offers a multifaceted view of what sex looked like before the term entered history. Through incisive interpretations of a wide range of literary texts, including Romeo and Juliet, The Comedy of Errors, Paradise Lost, the figure of Lucretia, and pornographic poetry, this collection queries what might constitute sex in the absence of a widely accepted definition and how a historicized concept of sex affects the kinds of arguments that can be made about early modern sexualities.Contributors: Holly Dugan, George Washington U; Will Fisher, CUNY–Lehman College; Stephen Guy-Bray, U of British Columbia; Melissa J. Jones, Eastern Michigan U; Thomas H. Luxon, Dartmouth College; Nicholas F. Radel, Furman U; Kathryn Schwarz, Vanderbilt U; Christine Varnado, U of Buffalo–SUNY.
James M. Bromley is assistant professor of English at Miami University. He is the author of Intimacy and Sexuality in the Age of Shakespeare.
ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Figuring Early Modern SexWill Stockton and James M. Bromley1. “Invisible Sex!”: What Looks Like the Act in Early Modern Drama?Christine Varnado2. Death and Theory: Or, the Problem of Counterfactual SexKathryn Schwarz3. Spectacular Impotence: Or, Things that Hardly Ever Happen in the Critical History of PornographyMelissa J. Jones4. “Unmanly Passion”: Sodomitical Self-Fashioning in John Ford’s The Lover’s Melancholy and Perkin WarbeckNicholas F. Radel5. The Erotics of Chin-chucking in Seventeenth-Century EnglandWill Fisher6. Rimming the RenaissanceJames M. Bromley7. Animal, Vegetable, Sexual: Metaphor in John Donne’s “Sappho to Philaenis” and Andrew Marvell’s “The Garden”Stephen Guy-Bray8. Aping Rape: Animal Ravishment and Sexual Knowledge in Early Modern EnglandHolly Dugan9. The Seduction of Milton’s Lady: Rape, Psychoanalysis, and the Erotics of Consumption in “Comus”Will Stockton10 “How human life began”: Sexual Reproduction in Book 8 of Paradise LostThomas H. LuxonAfterwordValerie TraubContributorsIndex