Description
About the Author
James M. Bromley is Associate Professor of English at Miami University. He is the author of Intimacy and Sexuality in the Age of Shakespeare (2012) and co-editor of Sex before Sex: Figuring the Act in Early Modern England (2013). He has been awarded a Solmsen Fellowship at the Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin and a Mellon Foundation Fellowship from the Folger Shakespeare Library.
Reviews
The book's playfulness makes it an often enjoyable read. Without wishing to spoil the opening of chapter 4 for future readers, I will say that in a field somewhat saturated with reappropriations of Greenblatt's desire to speak with the dead, this particular chapter opening is by far the one that has made me laugh the most. * Kit Heyam, Queen Mary, University of London, Early Theatre *
It is exemplary in bringing together scholarship from many different disciplines, and using it to push the boundaries of what we think of as dress history. His challenge of queerphobic and sex-negative history-making brings a powerful message to re-examine our personal biases and imagine a better and more diverse past, and then bring that thinking to the present and future. * Luise Kocaurek, Journal of Dress History *
The book thus masterfully interweaves critical theory with analysis grounded in historical context...For those teaching or researching themes of construction of the self, embodiment, gender identity, and theatricality, there will be much to ponder after reading this thoughtful and surprising study. * John S. Garrison, Grinnell College, Renaissance and Reformation *
Beyond its elegant analyses of queer style, the book proposes concepts of "queer worldmaking" and "cruisy historicism" (the latter developed in chapter 4) to enable new ways of understanding past and present articulations of embodiment nd desire...This template, as indeed the book as a whole, will doubtless prove indispensable for queer critics within and well beyond the field of early modern studies. * David L. Orvis, Appalachian State University, Renaissance Quarterly *
Romley's investment in seeing early modern drama as a site for the promulgation of queer life possibilities is vital and inspiring, and his framing of queer style as 'pedagogical' is an important step forward for early modern sexuality studies, which has recently begun to think about the ways that we learn how to be ourselves. Beyond its important contributions to queer studies, this book will also be of great interest to those interested in city comedy, material culture, and masculinity, and Bromley's focus on non-Shakespearean drama is most welcome. * Joseph Gamble, University of Toledo, Shakespeare Bulletin *
Book Information
ISBN 9780198867821
Author James M. Bromley
Format Hardback
Page Count 240
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 512g
Dimensions(mm) 241mm * 165mm * 19mm