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Logsex in Hell: What a Body Can't Do
- Author(s):
- Karl Steel (see profile)
- Date:
- 2016
- Group(s):
- CLCS Medieval, GS Folklore, Myth, and Fairy Tale, GS Speculative Fiction, TC Women’s and Gender Studies
- Subject(s):
- Literature, Medieval, Queer theory
- Item Type:
- Conference paper
- Conf. Title:
- The Body Unbound: Literary Approaches to the Classical Corpus
- Conf. Org.:
- Brooklyn College Classics Department and the Wolfe Institute
- Conf. Loc.:
- Brooklyn College
- Conf. Date:
- Oct 7-8, 2016
- Tag(s):
- Medieval literature
- Permanent URL:
- http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/M6FS50
- Abstract:
- My paper concerns two radically distinct portrayals of genital injury. The first examples, drawn from legal and doctrinal narrative, describe the cultural norm of meaningful castration. The other, which provides my paper with its title, is from Peter of Cornwall’s Book of Revelations. This set of one is an analogous injury that may mean nothing: neither penitential nor quite juridical, it may be just a strange injury, something that just happens. Rather than resolve this quandary, I’ll instead conclude by exploring the ethics of interpreting literary accounts of torment.
- Metadata:
- xml
- Status:
- Published
- License:
- All Rights Reserved
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