Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Foreword
- Introduction: The Revel, the Melodye and the Bisynesse of Solas
- ‘So wel koude he me glose’: The Wife of Bath and the Eroticism of Touch
- The Lady's Man: Gawain as Lover in Middle English Literature
- Erotic Magic: The Enchantress in Middle English Romance
- ‘wordy vnthur wede’: Clothing, Nakedness and the Erotic in some Romances of Medieval Britain
- ‘Some Like it Hot’: The Medieval Eroticism of Heat
- How's Your Father? Sex and the Adolescent Girl in Sir Degarré
- The Female ‘Jewish’ Libido in Medieval Culture
- Eros and Error: Gross Sexual Transgression in the Fourth Branch of the Mabinogi
- Perverse and Contrary Deeds: The Giant of Mont Saint Michel and the Alliterative Morte Arthure
- Her Desire and His: Letters between Fifteenth-century Lovers
- Sex in the Sight of God: Theology and the Erotic in Peter of Blois' ‘Grates ago veneri’
- A Fine and Private Place
- Erotic Historiography: Writing the Self and History in Twelfth-century Romance and the Renaissance
- Index
The Female ‘Jewish’ Libido in Medieval Culture
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Foreword
- Introduction: The Revel, the Melodye and the Bisynesse of Solas
- ‘So wel koude he me glose’: The Wife of Bath and the Eroticism of Touch
- The Lady's Man: Gawain as Lover in Middle English Literature
- Erotic Magic: The Enchantress in Middle English Romance
- ‘wordy vnthur wede’: Clothing, Nakedness and the Erotic in some Romances of Medieval Britain
- ‘Some Like it Hot’: The Medieval Eroticism of Heat
- How's Your Father? Sex and the Adolescent Girl in Sir Degarré
- The Female ‘Jewish’ Libido in Medieval Culture
- Eros and Error: Gross Sexual Transgression in the Fourth Branch of the Mabinogi
- Perverse and Contrary Deeds: The Giant of Mont Saint Michel and the Alliterative Morte Arthure
- Her Desire and His: Letters between Fifteenth-century Lovers
- Sex in the Sight of God: Theology and the Erotic in Peter of Blois' ‘Grates ago veneri’
- A Fine and Private Place
- Erotic Historiography: Writing the Self and History in Twelfth-century Romance and the Renaissance
- Index
Summary
IT IS ALMOST a commonplace that in its stereotypes a society articulates its rdeeply held desires; through strategies of symbolic violence medieval English people could express precious, secret and fragile thoughts. In identifying these desires there is necessarily a degree of speculation, a filling-in of the gaps in what is said and unsaid: what did people, from whom we are now distant, desire? How was this desire mediated? How do texts speak for the desires of their authors and audiences?
In answering these questions contemporary criticism has perceived sexual desire to be latent in medieval Christian portrayals of Jews. Jacob Press has argued that Chaucer, in ‘The Prioress's Tale’, uses antisemitic fictions of Mariology and corporeality to stage a homoerotic encounter. Kathleen Biddick's work on circumcision and temporality has likewise placed genitalia at the symbolic centre of Christian attempts to move beyond Judaism; for Biddick, via Freud, the prepuce is primarily an anxious sexual signifier. Steven Kruger has ‘queered’ the topos of Jewish-Christian religious conversion, using Judith Butler's conceptualisation of ‘gender as a kind of melancholy, or as one of melancholy's effects’. Robert Mills, examining images of the Passion, has described the extravagantly phallic modes of ‘Jewish’ torturers versus the feminised body of Christ. For Ruth Evans, the Jewish presence in virgin martyr narratives is part of a ‘violent production of Englishness’ connecting sexuality, nationalism and torture. Lisa Lampert has argued for a parallel reading of gender difference and Jewish difference (to which I shall return).
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- The Erotic in the Literature of Medieval Britain , pp. 94 - 104Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2007