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Edward II and a Literature of Same-Sex Love - The Gay King in Fiction, 1590-1640 (Hardcover)
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Edward II and a Literature of Same-Sex Love - The Gay King in Fiction, 1590-1640 (Hardcover)
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The narrative re-tellings of the life, reign, and death of the
English King Edward II (reigned 1307-1327) present a unique
opportunity for scholars of sexuality in the early modern era. This
is because the works of authors like Christopher Marlowe, Michael
Drayton, Sir Francis Hubert, Elizabeth Cary, and Richard Niccols
were all inspired by the public, cultural memory fashioned from
Edward's same-sex love affair with Piers Gaveston. As such, each of
them presents a particular representation of and a specific
discourse about male-male sexual relations in the Renaissance. In
other words, what these works present is a concentrated body of
literature about same-sex love in the early modern era: works that
openly and frankly explore the possible origins of the love, the
reasons and causes for it; works that explore the ramifications of
male-male romantic relationships; works that explore the sexual
politics and sociocultural dynamics of same-sex romantic
partnerships; and works that describe and denote same-sex love from
an English Renaissance perspective. This study looks at each of the
major Renaissance texts about Edward II and examines the means
through which each text understands and analyzes the nature of
male-male same-sex love. From Marlowe's crafting of a
lover-identity for Edward to Drayton's obsession with Marlowe's
version of (gay) history; from Hubert's Augustinian construction of
Edward's nature to Cary's identification with the fallen king to
Niccols' inspired exemplum, what each of these works demonstrates
is that the "love that dare not speak its name" would not be
silenced, at least not in the case of Edward and Gaveston. When one
sees the name Edward II, one also sees his same-sex loves. The
correlation has become ingrained into our public recall of history.
Thus, as far as the world is concerned, Edward II was-and ever will
be-the gay king.
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