Description
About the Author
Ari Friedlander is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Mississippi. His scholarship on sexuality, class, and disability in early modern English literature has been published in SEL: Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900, JEMCS: Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies, The Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare and Embodiment, and other venues. His research has been supported by grants from the Henry E. Huntington Library, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and the Volkswagen Foundation.
Reviews
In Rogue Sexuality in Early Modern English Literature, Ari Friedlander does more than tell the story of Renaissance rogues (the highwaymen, con artists and sex workers of Shakespeare's England). Through dazzling readings of early modern drama (as well as canting literature, works of early demography and Paradise Lost) he shows us a new way to study the history and culture of ourselves - and how our insatiable desires helped shape the identities we carry today. * Shakespeare's Globe Book Award Judges *
Rogue Sexuality is original, compelling, and timely. It makes a crucial intervention in early modern sexuality studies by centering labor and class (both the representation of low status and the appropriation of it by elites), and by demonstrating how a Foucaultian biopolitics illuminates concerns about poverty, sexual reproduction, and social order in early modern England. It will change how we theorize the relationship between the social and the sexual in early modern texts. * Mario DiGangi *
This is a tightly argued, thorough and theoretically informed account of an important subject, which succeeds in analysing rogue sexuality across a dazzling array of contexts. It is an excellent work that makes valuable contributions to the study of sexuality and class in early modern England. * Ezra Horbury, Shakespeare Survey *
Where do rogues come from? Thanks to Ari Friedlander's Rogue Sexuality in Early Modern English Literature, I now know a perfect phrase for characterizing the impulse animating this query. We may henceforth designate scholars who study Robert Greene's cony-catchers and Shakespeare's Autolycus as "Rogue Curious," which is the witty title of the first chapter in this exciting book. [...] The book's final chapters model what literary scholarship inspired by rogue curiosity might look like. Because of them, Shakespeare's Perdita proves more Autolycus than I ever thought, and Milton's Edenic pair as much rogue spouses as companionate partners. Henceforth it will be hard for me to imagine them otherwise. * Vin Nardizzi, Shakespeare Quarterly *
[A] welcome addition to the study of social forces that shape - and are shaped by - gender and sexuality in early modern English literature....[T]his learned and evocative study, would make for excellent reading in an undergraduate or graduate course on early modern gender and sexuality studies. * John Garrison, Renaissance Studies *
Awards
Winner of Shortlisted, Shakespeare's Globe Book Award Shortlisted, Shakespeare Association of America First Book Award.
Book Information
ISBN 9780192863171
Author Ari Friedlander
Format Hardback
Page Count 224
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 496g
Dimensions(mm) 240mm * 164mm * 22mm