Representing Kink: Fringe Sexuality and Textuality in Literature, Digital Narrative, and Popular Culture

Representing Kink: Fringe Sexuality and Textuality in Literature, Digital Narrative, and Popular Culture

Representing Kink: Fringe Sexuality and Textuality in Literature, Digital Narrative, and Popular Culture

Representing Kink: Fringe Sexuality and Textuality in Literature, Digital Narrative, and Popular Culture

Paperback

$44.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Representing Kink raises awareness about non-normative texts and non-normative erotic practices and desires. It defines “kink” broadly, encompassing a range of “inappropriate” texts and understanding it in frequent reference to non-normative erotic fantasies and experiences. Kink is treated as both a set of practices as well as a category of texts at the nexus of subject and form. In addition to canonical texts that take up erotic and marginalized themes, the collection also studies forms that are themselves fringe and feature kink: taboo literature, self-published erotica, SM narratives, fan fiction, role-playing games, and other disavowed texts. The purpose of this study is to focus attention on the margins of an already marginalized subject, in order to highlight the extent to which non-normative textuality and eroticism both shape and are shaped by culture and context. It sheds light on a category of subjects that is at once mainstream in the form of texts such as Fifty Shades of Grey and yet nevertheless repeatedly disparaged and undertheorized. This book advocates for conversations about kinky texts that transcend dichotomous frameworks of good and bad, and normal and deviant—thinking instead in new, theoretically rigorous and flexible directions.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498590877
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 07/15/2021
Pages: 194
Product dimensions: 6.08(w) x 8.57(h) x 0.58(d)

About the Author

Susan E. Cook is associate professor of English at Southern New Hampshire University.



Sara K. Howe is associate professor of English and creative writing coordinator at Southern New Hampshire University.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Entering the Fringe

Sara K. Howe and Susan E. Cook

1. Playing Rough: Consent, Captivity, and Rape Role Play in Taboo Erotic Romances

Sara K. Howe

2. Violating the Vampire: Twihard Fan Fiction as Rape Fantasy

Jane M. Kubiesa

3. A Kink of One’s Own: Subversion, Disorientation, and the Feminine Voice in Kathy Acker’s Blood and Guts in High School

Fe Lorraine Reyes

4. Queer Beginnings: From Fanzines to Rule 34

Brian Watson and Bobby Derie

5. It’s a (Bound and Gagged) Living: Sweet Gwendoline and the “Danger Girl” Archetype

Sean Shannon

6. Kinking the Canon: Pornography and Prose in Fingersmith and The Handmaiden

Susan E. Cook

7. “To Test the Limits and Break Through”: How Femslash Rejects Straight-Coding of Queer Experiences in Disney’s Frozen

Whitney S. May

8. Breaking the Scales: Refusal, Excess, and the Fat Male Body in Supernatural and Harry Potter Fan Fiction

Jonathan A. Rose

9. “Roll for Seduction”: Sex as Forbidden Play in Critical Role and The Adventure Zone Fan Fiction

Josh Zimmerman and Antonnet Johnson



About the Editors

About the Contributors

Index
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews