Making it Ours: Queering the CanonUniversity Press of the South, 1998 - 193 sidor |
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Sida 45
... describes from a woman's viewpoint but also the reaction that those scenes evoke in his intended straight reader ... describe what she sees so that the act between two men forces Cleland's intended audience to look directly at sodomy ...
... describes from a woman's viewpoint but also the reaction that those scenes evoke in his intended straight reader ... describe what she sees so that the act between two men forces Cleland's intended audience to look directly at sodomy ...
Sida 80
... describes character , setting or action , what has not been described ? Why are we supposed to focus on what he immediately places before us ? Because we find ourselves mesmerized by words , we usually look no further than the obvious ...
... describes character , setting or action , what has not been described ? Why are we supposed to focus on what he immediately places before us ? Because we find ourselves mesmerized by words , we usually look no further than the obvious ...
Sida 82
... describes that tense moment before we can speak . The heterosexual lover can go from this moment to directly speaking to the woman whom he desires ; the gay lover often speaks only with his eyes . No knowing how his spoken words will be ...
... describes that tense moment before we can speak . The heterosexual lover can go from this moment to directly speaking to the woman whom he desires ; the gay lover often speaks only with his eyes . No knowing how his spoken words will be ...
Innehåll
Overview | 1 |
Seizing the Erotic | 23 |
The Sexual Predator | 47 |
Upphovsrätt | |
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Vanliga ord och fraser
accept actor actually Allan Ginsberg articulate become Bildungsroman body character closet conceal condemned constructed cross dressing culture describes deviant difference dominant society Dracula drag queen erotic eroticism erotophobia evil experience faultlines fear female feminine feminized force gay male gay readers gender Heathcliff heterosexist heterosexual hide homo homoerotic homoeroticism homophobia homosexual identify identity interpretation invisible label Lesbian literary text literature lover male voice manly masculine mask masturbation monster moral narrative narrator Native American novel openly gay ourselves Pandarus person physical play pleasure poem poet poetry pornography position queer Queer Theory question rape role Satan secret seems sex scenes sexual act sexual behavior sexual desire shape silence social sodomy soul space speak stereotype story straight subtext surface syllabic verse Tayo Tayo's tell textual threatens tion transgressive truth viewer voyeur wearer woman women words writer young