Romanticism and male fantasy in Byron's Don Juan : a marketable vice

Author(s)

    • Donelan, Charles

Bibliographic Information

Romanticism and male fantasy in Byron's Don Juan : a marketable vice

Charles Donelan

(Romanticism in perspective : texts, cultures, histories)

Macmillan , St. Martin's Press, 2000

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Don Juan , Byron's best poem, is a sensational radical satire. It uses the legend of Don Juan to expose the male fantasies behind Romanticism and nineteenth-century public culture. Critics feared that the poem was a 'manual for vice' and would corrupt society. Should England's best selling author have been censored? This book looks at how Europe's most famous literary celebrity shows his dark side in Don Juan , a canonical long poem and a pop culture masterpiece.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Romanticism and Vice in an Age of Reaction Learning to Say Juan The Feminization of Male Fantasy: Reimagining Narrative Pleasure in Cantos II and III The Fantasy of Superfluous Heads: From The Harem to the Hydra Mortal Fantasies: The Politics of Skepticism Marriage, Mobility, and the Disavowal of Closure Don Juan as a Defense of Liberty Notes Index

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