Making Love
Get notified when this item comes back in stock.

Making Love  (English, Paperback, Kelleher Paul)

Be the first to Review this product
Special price
₹4,170
4,995
16% off
i
Sold Out
This item is currently out of stock
Author
Read More
Highlights
  • Language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Publisher: Bucknell University Press
  • Genre: Literary Criticism
  • ISBN: 9781611486957, 9781611486957
  • Pages: 270
Seller
BOOKSWAGONN
3.3
  • 7 Days Replacement Policy
    ?
  • See other sellers
  • Description
    In Making Love: Sentiment and Sexuality in Eighteenth-Century British Literature, Paul Kelleher revises the history of sexuality from the vantage point of the literary history of sentimentalism. Kelleher demonstrates how eighteenth-century British philosophers, essayists, and novelists fundamentally reconceived the relations among sentiment, sexuality, and moral virtue. It is his contention that sentimental discourse, both philosophical and literary, posited heterosexual desire as the precondition of moral feeling and conduct. The author further suggests that sentimental writers fashioned the ideal of conjugal love as an ideological antidote to the theories of self-love and self-interest found in the works of Thomas Hobbes and Bernard Mandeville. Heterosexual desire and its culmination in conjugal love, in other words, were represented as the privileged means for an individual to transcend self-love and to develop a moral sensibility attuned to the thoughts and feelings of others. At the same time, Kelleher suggests, other pleasures and desires-particularly those rooted in same-sex eroticism-were increasingly depicted as antithetical to conjugal love and, thus, were morally devalued and socially disenfranchised. Kelleher's argument unfolds through close readings of a variety of texts, including Shaftesbury's Characteristics of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times, Joseph Addison and Richard Steele's the Tatler and the Spectator, Eliza Haywood's Love in Excess, Samuel Richardson's Pamela, and Henry Fielding's Tom Jones. Although these texts embody diverse rhetorical strategies and thematic concerns, he shows how they collectively reinforce an overarching sentimental ideology: on the one hand, heterosexual desire and conjugal love become synonymous with sympathy, benevolence, and moral goodness, while on the other hand, same-sex desire is pathologized as a selfish withdrawal from procreation, domesticity, sociability, and ultimately, "humanity" itself.
    Read More
    Specifications
    Book Details
    Imprint
    • Bucknell University Press
    Dimensions
    Width
    • 20 mm
    Height
    • 231 mm
    Length
    • 149 mm
    Weight
    • 399 gr
    Be the first to ask about this product
    Safe and Secure Payments.Easy returns.100% Authentic products.
    You might be interested in
    Plays
    Min. 50% Off
    Shop Now
    Religion And Belief Books
    Min. 50% Off
    Shop Now
    Art Books
    Min. 50% Off
    Shop Now
    Philosophy Books
    Min. 50% Off
    Shop Now
    Back to top