Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Literary Criticism Gay & Lesbian

Against Reproduction

Where Renaissance Poems Come From

by (author) Stephen Guy-Bray

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Dec 2010
Category
Gay & Lesbian, Medieval
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781442685819
    Publish Date
    Dec 2010
    List Price
    $74.00

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

The idea of the author as parent and the text as child is a pervasive metaphor throughout Renaissance poetry and drama. In Against Reproduction, Stephen Guy-Bray sets out to systematically interrogate this common trope, and to consider the limits of using heterosexual reproduction to think of textual creation.

Through an analysis of Renaissance texts by poets and playwrights including William Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe, and John Milton, Guy-Bray argues that the reproductive metaphor was only one of the ways in which writers presented their own literary production. Their uses of sexual language reveal that these authors were surprisingly ambivalent about their own writing. Guy-Bray suggests that they often presented their work in such a way as to feminize themselves and to associate the writing process with shame and abjection.

Offering fresh perspectives on well-known texts, Against Reproduction is an accessible and compelling book that will affect the study of both Renaissance literature and queer theory.

About the author

Stephen Guy-Bray is a professor in the Department of English at the University of British Columbia.

Stephen Guy-Bray's profile page

Editorial Reviews

'Against Reproduction is exciting, irreverent, and wonderfully erudite. It will be indispensible for scholars of Renaissance texts and queer studies alike.'

Madhavi Menon, Department of Literature, American University

'Against Reproduction is a pioneering and erudite study that should hold wide appeal for scholars of Renaissance poetry, the history of sexuality, and the history of the book. Stephen Guy-Bray has written a sophisticated book in an accessible and compelling style that sets out to systematically interrogate the guiding trope of literary production in the early modern period: reproduction. He persuasively demonstrates that sexuality and productivity have not always been linked and argues that Renaissance authors engaged erotic metaphors in various ways that were not always determined by the ends of normative (hetero)sexuality.'

Amanda Bailey, Department of English, University of Connecticut