Sexual freedom in restoration literature

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Sexual freedom in restoration literature

Warren Chernaik

Cambridge University Press, 1995

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The pursuit of sexual freedom and its political, philosophical and practical implications are the themes of this wide-ranging study of restoration literature, which confronts ideological issues of sexual politics equally relevant to modern debate. The author examines the writers of the later seventeenth century in their historical context, and focuses particularly on what happens when women desire sexual freedom as well as men. In a study of the writings, notorious for their sexual candour, of the Earl of Rochester, God-haunted atheist and licensed rebel of the Restoration court, and Aphra Behn, the most prominent and most controversial woman writer of the period, the author explores some of the tensions inherent in the ideology of individual liberty as applied to the conduct of sexual relations inside and outside marriage. The works by Rochester, Aphra Behn and their contemporaries gain much of their power from the ambivalence with which they treat the competing claims of freedom and authority, rebelliousness and security, the assertion of power and the need to love.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: the imperfect enjoyment
  • 1. Hobbes and the libertines
  • 2. The tyranny of desire: sex and politics in Rochester
  • 3. Absent from thee
  • 4. Playing trick for trick: domestic rebellion and the female libertine
  • 5. My masculine part: Aphra Behn and the androgynous imagination
  • Index.

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