Those who love and live by art, tell us that it is the most exalted expression of civilized life. In this provocative new book Jonathan Dollimore argues that, far from confirming humane values, literature more often than not violates them. He begins with a polemical and witty attack on the spurious radicalism of some fashionable academic theories about desire and sexual dissidence. Dollimore then examines the ways in which the media, literary critics and the state, as well as these literary theorists, all deny or repress the disturbing and dangerous knowledge conveyed by literature. His own account of the volatile connections between aesthetics, desire, politics and censorship unfolds through topics such as homosexuality, bisexuality, sexual disgust, and the disturbing relations between art and inhumanity, and through brilliant insights into a wide range of authors including Euripides, Shakespeare, Tennyson and Yeats. Most persistently, this book is about how the experience of desire in life and art compromises our most cherished ethical beliefs. If this helps make art irresistible and of indispensable value, it follows too that there are reasonable grounds for wanting to censor it. This compelling and accessibly written book will be essential reading for students and scholars of literary, gender and cultural studies, and will have a major impact on debates about art, sexuality, censorship and the role of the intellectual.
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Sex, Literature and Censorship
Outrages brings us the story of the English poet and memoirist John Addington Symonds, and shows how a law created in the mid-1800s led to reverberations lasting to our day.
Edited by Edmund Gosse and Thomas James Wise. London: William Heinemann, 1925. —. The Complete Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne, vol. 2. Edited by Edmund Gosse and Thomas James Wise. London: William Heinemann, 1925. —. The Dark Blue.
“Books That Are Barred.” Munsey's Magazine, December 1913, pp. 493–97. McCoy, Ralph E. Banned in Boston: The Development of Literary Censorship in Massachusetts. Urbana: University of Illinois, 1956. Rolph, Cecil Hewitt.
These are just some of the questions explored in this wide-ranging study of sexual dissidence which returns to the early modern period in order to focus, question, and develop issues of postmodernity.
A critical, historical, and thematic study of the origins, forms, manifestations, techniques, and purposes of censorship and censors, from primitive taboos to the latest Supreme Court rulings
Darnton, R., Censors at Work: How States Shaped Literature, New York and London: W. W. Norton, 2014. Dollimore, J., Sex, Literature and Censorship, Cambridge and Boston: Polity, 2001. During, S., Against Democracy: Literary Experience ...
Sex, Literature, and Censorship: Essays, New York: Viking Press. Levenson, Michael (ed.) (1999) The Cambridge Companion to Modernism, New York: Cambridge University Press. Maeda Ai (2001) Kindai dokusha no seiritsu (The Birth of the ...