Update cookies preferences

E-book: Sex Lives: Intimate Infrastructures in Early Modernity

  • Format: 224 pages
  • Pub. Date: 22-Aug-2023
  • Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781512824612
  • Format - PDF+DRM
  • Price: 67,92 €*
  • * the price is final i.e. no additional discount will apply
  • Add to basket
  • Add to Wishlist
  • This ebook is for personal use only. E-Books are non-refundable.
  • Format: 224 pages
  • Pub. Date: 22-Aug-2023
  • Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781512824612

DRM restrictions

  • Copying (copy/paste):

    not allowed

  • Printing:

    not allowed

  • Usage:

    Digital Rights Management (DRM)
    The publisher has supplied this book in encrypted form, which means that you need to install free software in order to unlock and read it.  To read this e-book you have to create Adobe ID More info here. Ebook can be read and downloaded up to 6 devices (single user with the same Adobe ID).

    Required software
    To read this ebook on a mobile device (phone or tablet) you'll need to install this free app: PocketBook Reader (iOS / Android)

    To download and read this eBook on a PC or Mac you need Adobe Digital Editions (This is a free app specially developed for eBooks. It's not the same as Adobe Reader, which you probably already have on your computer.)

    You can't read this ebook with Amazon Kindle

"How do we learn how to have sex? What do we mean when we talk about our "sex lives"? This book takes up these theoretical questions in an historical key, analyzing literature, art, and personal testimonies from early modern Europe in order to uncover glimpses of how early moderns learned how to have sex, and how sex structured their daily lives"--

In Sex Lives, Joseph Gamble draws from literature, art, and personal testimonies from sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe to uncover how early moderns learned to have sex. In the early modern period, Gamble contends, everyone from pornographers to Shakespeare recognized that sex requires knowledge of both logistics (how to do it) and affect (how to feel about it). And knowledge, of course, takes practice.

Gamble turns to a wide range of early modern texts and images from England, France, and Italy, ranging from personal accounts to closet dramas to visual art in order to excavate and analyze a variety of sexual practices in early modernity. Using an intersectional, phenomenological approach to bring historical light to the quotidian sexual experiences of early modern subjects, the book develops the critical concept of the “sex life”—a colloquialism that opens up methodological avenues for understanding daily lived experience in granular detail, both in the distant past and today. Through this lens, Gamble explores how sex organized and permeated everyday life and experiences of gender and race in early modernity. He shows how affects around sex structure the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries, revealing the role of sexual feeling and sexual racism in early modern English drama.

Sex Lives reshapes how we understand Renaissance literature, the history of sexuality, and the meaning of sex in both early modern Europe and our own moment.

Reviews

"Sex Lives is a long overdue testament to the valuepedagogically, intellectually, and historicallyof peering behind the closed doors of early modern bedchambers. The messy, quotidian reality of sex often gets pushed aside in our teaching and our scholarship because, well, it's just thatmessy and quotidian. But, as Sex Lives convincingly argues, those are the very things that make the sex life worth studying." (Nursing Clio) "With verve and exactitude, Sex Lives unpacks the epistemological and affective infrastructures that undergird a 'sex life.' Boldly moving beyond the discursive paradigm that has long governed the history of sexuality, it lingers on the process of learning how to have sexexploring both sexual 'know-how' and sexual 'feel-how' through an impassioned commitment to queer thriving." (Valerie Traub, author of Thinking Sex with the Early Moderns) "Original, wry, and winningly earnest, Sex Lives reveals a highly provocative truth often made invisible, that sex, like other quotidian acts that shape our experience and sense of self, is a learned practice." (Patricia Akhimie, author of Shakespeare and the Cultivation of Difference)

More info

Showing how sex, including sexual racism, structured everyday life in early modernity, Sex Lives reshapes how we understand Renaissance literature, the history of sexuality, and the meaning of sex in both early modern Europe and our own moment.
Joseph Gamble is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Toledo.