ABSTRACT

This volume brings together two vibrant areas of Renaissance studies today: memory and sexuality. The contributors show that not only Shakespeare but also a broad range of his contemporaries were deeply interested in how memory and sexuality interact. Are erotic experiences heightened or deflated by the presence of memory? Can a sexual act be commemorative? Can an act of memory be eroticized? How do forms of romantic desire underwrite forms of memory? To answer such questions, these authors examine drama, poetry, and prose from both major authors and lesser-studied figures in the canon of Renaissance literature. Alongside a number of insightful readings, they show that sonnets enact a sexual exchange of memory; that epics of nationhood cannot help but eroticize their subjects; that the act of sex in Renaissance tragedy too often depends upon violence of the past. Memory, these scholars propose, re-shapes the concerns of queer and sexuality studies – including the unhistorical, the experience of desire, and the limits of the body. So too does the erotic revise the dominant trends of memory studies, from the rhetoric of the medieval memory arts to the formation of collective pasts.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

The Erotics of Recollection

part |80 pages

Legacies of Desire

chapter |13 pages

Intimate Histories

Desire, Genre, and the Trojan War in The Araygnement of Paris

chapter |8 pages

Remembering to Forget

Shakespeare's Sonnet 35 and Sigo's “XXXV”

chapter |15 pages

“The stage is down, and Philomela's choir is hushed from pricksong”

Revising and (Re)membering in Middleton's The Ghost of Lucrece

chapter |14 pages

Guinevere's Ghost

Spenser's Response to Malory's Erotics

part |62 pages

Bodies, Remember

chapter |15 pages

Strange Love

Funerary Erotics in Romeo and Juliet

chapter |13 pages

“The monument woos me”

Necrophilia as Commemoration in Thomas Middleton's The Lady's Tragedy

part |80 pages

Intimate Refusals

chapter |18 pages

Well-Divided Dispositions

Distraction, Dying, and the Eroticism of Forgetting in Antony and Cleopatra

chapter |13 pages

“Despisèd straight”

Shakespeare's Observation of Semantic Memory Bias

chapter |17 pages

Hamlet without Sex

The Politics of Regenerate Loss

chapter |8 pages

Afterword

“A Prescript Order of Life”: Memory, Sexuality, Selfhood