Book contents
- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature
- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Synchronic Histories of American Sexuality
- Part II Diachronic Histories of American Sexuality
- Part III Queer Methods
- How to Recognize the Queer Past before (and during) the Advent of Medicalization
- 39 Repression, Sublimation, and Latency from Charles Brockden Brown to James Purdy
- 40 Gender Variance before Trans
- 41 Female Friendship
- 42 The Medical Model and Early Gay and Lesbian Writing
- 43 “Flung out of space”
- 44 Quantifying Sex
- 45 The Pleasures of Reading Camp
- 46 The Queerness of Religion
- 47 Tracing Queer Crip Poetics in Time
- 48 Queer Print Culture
- Index
46 - The Queerness of Religion
from How to Recognize the Queer Past before (and during) the Advent of Medicalization
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 May 2024
- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature
- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Synchronic Histories of American Sexuality
- Part II Diachronic Histories of American Sexuality
- Part III Queer Methods
- How to Recognize the Queer Past before (and during) the Advent of Medicalization
- 39 Repression, Sublimation, and Latency from Charles Brockden Brown to James Purdy
- 40 Gender Variance before Trans
- 41 Female Friendship
- 42 The Medical Model and Early Gay and Lesbian Writing
- 43 “Flung out of space”
- 44 Quantifying Sex
- 45 The Pleasures of Reading Camp
- 46 The Queerness of Religion
- 47 Tracing Queer Crip Poetics in Time
- 48 Queer Print Culture
- Index
Summary
The most familiar way of conjoining religion and queerness in America is proscriptive. This is so despite the vivid presence of non-normative sexualities in the sacred stories of nearly all religions and the formative labors of queer-identified persons in their ranks. In invocations of American religion the default religion is likely to be Christian; the default Christianity, Protestant; the primary office of religion, morality; and the morality in question, sexual morality. In this way, the very category of religion in America is shaped by the pathologizing of non-normative sexualities. If to embrace queer lives is to depart from faithful Christian witness, then all departures from right religion bear the taint of suspect desire. But exile is not the only place of queerness in American religious lives, as literary history amply confirms. By what paths did early American texts come to identify religion as heteronormative? And how has a more generative religious imagination of queerness come to shape American literature? This chapter tracks these questions by moving between Puritan invocations of queerness as civic and spiritual threat and later rejoinders in American letters.
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- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature , pp. 818 - 832Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024