Religion and Sexuality in American Literature

Religion and Sexuality in American Literature

by Ann-Janine Morey
Religion and Sexuality in American Literature

Religion and Sexuality in American Literature

by Ann-Janine Morey

Hardcover

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Overview

Through the voice of American fiction, Religion and Sexuality in American Fiction examines the relations of body and spirit (religion and sexuality) by asking two basic questions: How have American novelists handled the interaction between religious and sexual experience? Are there instructive similarities and differences in how male and female authors write about religion and sexuality? Using both canonical and noncanonical fiction, Ann-Janine Morey examines novels dealing with the ministry as the medium wherein so many of the tensions of religion and sexuality are dramatized, and then moves to contemporary novels that deal with moral and religious issues through metaphor. Based on a sophisticated and selective application of metaphor theory, deconstruction, and feminist postmodernism, Morey argues that while American fiction has replicated many traditional animosities, there are also some rather surprising resources here for commonality between men and women if we acknowledge and understand the intimate relationship between language and physical life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780521416764
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 06/26/1992
Series: Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture , #57
Pages: 292
Product dimensions: 6.34(w) x 9.33(h) x 1.02(d)

Table of Contents

Introduction; 1. Body language: religion, sexuality and the bioluminescence of metaphor; 2. The stubborn density of desire: religion and sexuality in nineteenth-century fiction; 3. A tradition of divine lechery: men write about the ministry; 4. A war of words: women write about the ministry; 5. Comfort to the enemy: women write about the ministry; 6. The fox in the well: metaphors of embodiment in the androcentric imagination; 7. Fatal abstractions: metaphors of embodiment in the gynocentric imagination; 8. Conclusion: words are not the thing itself; Appendices; Bibliography; Index.
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