Men Beyond Desire: Manhood, Sex, and Violation in American Literature

Front Cover
Palgrave Macmillan, Sep 3, 2005 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 294 pages
This book explores the construction of male sexuality in nineteenth-century American literature and comes up with some startling findings. Far from desiring heterosexual sex and wishing to bond with other men through fraternity, the male protagonists of classic American literature mainly want to be left alone. Greven makes the claim that American men, eschewing both marriage and male friendship, strive to remain emotionally and sexually inviolate. Examining the work of traditional authors - Hawthorne, Poe, Melville, Cooper, Irving, Stowe - Greven discovers highly untraditional and transgressive representations of desire and sexuality. Objects of desire from both women and other men, the inviolate males discussed in this study overturn established gendered and sexual categories, just as this study overturns archetypal assumptions about American manhood and American literature.

About the author (2005)

David Greven is an associate professor of English at the University of South Carolina. His other books include The Fragility of Manhood: Hawthorne, Freud, and the Politics of Gender (2012), Representations of Femininity in American Genre Cinema (2011), and Manhood in Hollywood from Bush to Bush (2010). His essays on literature have been published in journals such as Genders, New Literary History, American Quarterly, The Journal of American Culture, Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers, Nineteenth Century Studies, Studies in American Fiction, Poe Studies, The Nathaniel Hawthorne Review, and Modern Psychoanalysis.

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