Making it Ours: Queering the CanonUniversity Press of the South, 1998 - 193 sidor |
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Sida 79
... example , when I read a poem by someone who has openly identified as gay , I have no difficulty seeing the text itself as a gay space . I do not read as if the text were just like any other text by a heterosexual . Quite the contrary ...
... example , when I read a poem by someone who has openly identified as gay , I have no difficulty seeing the text itself as a gay space . I do not read as if the text were just like any other text by a heterosexual . Quite the contrary ...
Sida 111
... example ) , we often cannot separate the two . Footnotes and glosses in an anthology tell the reader that the poem he is reading has a certain degree of importance . After all , who would annotate something that was shallow or trite or ...
... example ) , we often cannot separate the two . Footnotes and glosses in an anthology tell the reader that the poem he is reading has a certain degree of importance . After all , who would annotate something that was shallow or trite or ...
Sida 158
... example , demythologized Alexander the Great in The Persian Boy , despite centuries of readers who made him into a straight icon . Often an interpretation is judged on the basis of what the writer supposedly intended , even though ...
... example , demythologized Alexander the Great in The Persian Boy , despite centuries of readers who made him into a straight icon . Often an interpretation is judged on the basis of what the writer supposedly intended , even though ...
Innehåll
Overview | 1 |
Seizing the Erotic | 23 |
The Sexual Predator | 47 |
Upphovsrätt | |
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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