Untutored Lines: The Making of the English Epyllion

Lorna Margaret Hutson (Editor), William Weaver

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract

A compelling cultural reinterpretation of humanist discourses of boyhood

The English epyllion, the highly erotic mythological verse that swept the London literary scene in the 1590s, is as much about rhetoric as about sex. So argues William Weaver in this fascinating study of Renaissance education and poetry. Rhetoric, moreover, is erotic. Far being merely formal, rhetoric is the key to deciphering the cultural meanings of an enigmatic genre.

Weaver attends to one of the epyllion's defining dramas: boys in transition to adulthood. Whereas recent studies of the epyllion have posited sexuality as the primary, even exclusive, means of representing beautiful boys, Weaver discovers that Renaissance male sexuality itself is an effect of a disciplinary drama of pedagogical transition from boyhood to adolescence, grammar to rhetoric. This drama of differentiation, lucidly expounded by Weaver, is at the heart of the erotic epyllia of Shakespeare, Marlowe and their imitators.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherEdinburgh University Press
Number of pages232
ISBN (Print)9780748644650
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2012

Publication series

NameEdinburgh Critical Studies in Renaissance Culture
PublisherEdinburgh University Press

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