Making it Ours: Queering the CanonUniversity Press of the South, 1998 - 193 sidor |
Från bokens innehåll
Resultat 1-3 av 65
Sida 3
... writer of one gender assumes the voice of the other , we encounter a kind of closet in which the writer assumes particular relations to words and especially to the words that describe sexual en- counters . In gender - blending narration ...
... writer of one gender assumes the voice of the other , we encounter a kind of closet in which the writer assumes particular relations to words and especially to the words that describe sexual en- counters . In gender - blending narration ...
Sida 75
... writer until we have read enough other texts by the writer to judge where the narrator differs . In this respect , the naive reaction that narrator and writer are the same is not entirely misleading . The text forces us to make a ...
... writer until we have read enough other texts by the writer to judge where the narrator differs . In this respect , the naive reaction that narrator and writer are the same is not entirely misleading . The text forces us to make a ...
Sida 115
... writer has given to what the reader adds . In both cases , the absence of the writer , even if that writer carefully prepared for as lim- ited an interpretation of the missing text as possible , leaves a faultline insofar as the writer ...
... writer has given to what the reader adds . In both cases , the absence of the writer , even if that writer carefully prepared for as lim- ited an interpretation of the missing text as possible , leaves a faultline insofar as the writer ...
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