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Sodomy, masculinity, and law in medieval literature : France and England, 1050-1230
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ISBN: 9780521839686 0521839688 9780511484735 9780521118583 0511211430 9780511211430 0511216807 9780511216800 0511213204 9780511213205 0511215010 9780511215018 0511484739 1107151139 9781107151130 1280540915 9781280540912 0511315503 9780511315503 0521118581 9786610540914 6610540918 Year: 2004 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

William Burgwinkle surveys poetry and letters, histories and literary fiction - including Grail romances - to offer a historical survey of attitudes towards same-sex love during the centuries that gave us the Plantagenet court of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine, courtly love, and Arthurian lore. Burgwinkle illustrates how 'sodomy' becomes a problematic feature of narratives of romance and knighthood. Most texts of the period denounce sodomy and use accusations of sodomitical practice as a way of maintaining a sacrificial climate in which masculine identity is set in opposition to the stigmatised other, for example the foreign, the feminine, and the heretical. What emerges from these readings, however, is that even the most homophobic, masculinist and normative texts of the period demonstrate an inability or unwillingness to separate the sodomitical from the orthodox. These blurred boundaries allow readers to glimpse alternative, even homoerotic, readings.

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