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Showing 1 - 7 of 7 matches in All Departments
Against the backdrop of Britain’s underground 18th and early-19th century homosexual culture, mob persecutions, and executions of homosexuals, Hobson shows how Blake's hatred of sexual and religious hypocrisy and state repression, and his revolutionary social vision, led him gradually to accept homosexuality as an integral part of human sexuality. In the process, Blake rejected the antihomosexual bias of British radical tradition, revised his idealization of aggressive male heterosexuality and his male-centered view of gender, and refined his conception of the cooperative commonwealth.
Against the backdrop of Britain's underground 18th and early-19th century homosexual culture, mob persecutions, and executions of homosexuals, Hobson shows how Blake's hatred of sexual and religious hypocrisy and state repression, and his revolutionary social vision, led him gradually to accept homosexuality as an integral part of human sexuality. In the process, Blake rejected the antihomosexual bias of British radical tradition, revised his idealization of aggressive male heterosexuality and his male-centered view of gender, and refined his conception of the cooperative commonwealth.
Gerald W. Johnson of North Carolina and Baltimore was one of the
most prominent American journalists of the twentieth century and
one of the outstanding essayists of any age. The author of some
three dozen books of history, biography, and commentary on American
politics and culture, he was an editorial writer for the Baltimore
Sunpapers from 1926 to 1943, a contributing editor of the "New
Republic" from 1954 until his death in 1980, and an advocate of
liberal causes for half a century. Johnson was, as Adlai Stevenson
said, "the conscience of America."
The appearance in 1920 of H. L. Mencken's scathing essay about the
intellectual and cultural impoverishment of the South, "The Sahara
of the Bozart," set off a firestorm of reaction in the region that
continued unabated for much of the next decade. In Serpent in Eden,
Mencken scholar Fred Hobson examines Mencken's love-hate
relationship with the South. He explores not only Mencken's savage
criticism of the region but also his efforts to encourage southern
writers and the bold "little magazines," such as the Reviewer and
the Double Dealer, that started up in the South during the
1920s.
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