Constructing Medieval Sexuality

Karma Lochrie, Peggy McCracken, and James A. Schultz, editors

Constructing Medieval Sexuality cover

$25.00 paper
ISBN: 0-8166-2829-7
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-2829-2

 

A groundbreaking examination of sexuality in the Middle Ages.

This collection is the first to be devoted entirely to medieval sexuality informed by current theories of sexuality and gender. It brings together essays from various disciplinary perspectivesliterary, theological, philosophical, medical, historical, and art historicalto consider how the Middle Ages defined, regulated, and represented sexual practices and desires.

Always considering sexuality in relation to gender, the body, and identity, the essays explore medieval sexuality as a historical construction produced by and embedded in the cultures and institutions of that period. Examining a range of medieval texts and images, the contributors explore the medieval understanding of sodomy, the historical construction of heterosexuality, the polymorphous erotics of female mysticism, and the intersections of sexuality with race, gender, and religion. This work not only offers new perspectives on the ways in which queer theory might inform our views of sexuality in medieval Europe, but also suggests that medieval constructions of sexuality may offer important contributions to both queer theory and the history of sexuality.

These essays, situated in the context of current debates, linger over various definitions of medieval sexuality; they speak to each other in their differences and their similarities to further productive thinking about the sometimes conflicting and always fascinating ways in which the Middle Ages regarded sex and sexuality.

"In a world of unnecessary collections of essays, Constructing Medieval Sexuality stands out as intense, scrupulous, far-reachingin two words, vitally needed." Carolyn Dinshaw, editor of GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies

Contributors: E. Jane Burns, Joan Cadden, Michael Camille, Dyan Elliott, Louise O. Fradenburg, Mark D. Jordan, Steven F. Kruger.

Karma Lochrie is associate professor of English at Loyola University of Chicago. James A. Schultz is associate professor of German at the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle. Peggy McCracken is assistant professor of French at the University of Illinois.

232 pages | 17 halftones | 5 7/8 x 9 | 1997
Medieval Cultures Series, volume 11