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The Pain of Reformation: Spenser, Vulnerability, and the Ethics of Masculinity

English

By (author): Joseph Campana

The Pain of Reformation argues that Edmund Spensers 1590 Faerie Queene represents an extended meditation on emerging notions of physical, social, and affective vulnerability in Renaissance England. Histories of violence, trauma, and injury have dominated literary studies, often obscuring vulnerability, or an openness to sensation, affect, and aesthetics that includes a wide range of pleasures and pains. This book approaches early modern sensations through the rubric of the vulnerable body, explores the emergence of notions of shared vulnerability, and illuminates a larger constellation of masculinity and ethics in post-Reformation England.
Spensers era grappled with Englands precarious political position in a world tense with religious strife and fundamentally transformed by the doctrinal and cultural sea changes of the Reformation, which had serious implications for how masculinity, affect, and corporeality would be experienced and represented. Intimations of vulnerability often collided with the tropes of heroic poetry, producing a combination of defensiveness, anxiety, and shame. It has been easy to identify predictably violent formations of early modern masculinity but more difficult to see Renaissance literature as an exploration of vulnerability.
The underside of representations of violence in Spensers poetry was a contemplation of the precarious lives of subjects in post-Reformation England. Spensers adoption of the allegory of Venus disarming Mars, understood in Renaissance Europe as an allegory of peace, indicates that The Faerie Queene is a heroic poem that militates against forms of violence and war that threatened to engulf Europe and devastate an England eager to militarize in response to perceived threats from within and without. In pursuing an analysis, disarmament, and redefinition of masculinity in response to a sense of shared vulnerability, Spensers poem reveals itself to be a vital archive of the way gender, violence, pleasure, and pain were understood.

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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Mar 2014
  • Publisher: Fordham University Press
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780823261680

About Joseph Campana

Joseph Campana is Alan Dugald McKillop Chair and Associate Professor at Rice University. He is the author of The Pain of Reformation: Spenser Vulnerability and the Ethics of Masculinity (Fordham 2012) which won the South Central MLA Book Prize and two collections of poetry The Book of Faces (Graywolf 2005) and Natural Selections (Iowa 2012) which won the Iowa Poetry Prize. His essays have appeared in PMLA Modern Philology ELH Shakespeare Shakespeare Studies and elsewhere. He is currently completing two studies The Childs Two Bodies which considers children and sovereignty in the works of Shakespeare and Bee Tree Child which explores scale multiplicity plasticity and other new rubrics for calibrating the relationship between human and non-human worlds in the Renaissance.

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