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same-sex marriage
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Journal Article
American Literature (2021) 93 (2): 338–341.
Published: 01 June 2021
... of the book that it does not accuse same-sex couples who choose to marry of “homonormativity,” since there are lots of ways to be queer not foreclosed by marriage. Rather, Rollins concludes Legally Straight with a discussion of the “elastic childhoods” of the marriage debate, from the potential fetuses...
Journal Article
American Literature (2015) 87 (4): 681–708.
Published: 01 December 2015
.... © 2015 by Duke University Press 2015 same-sex marriage Charles Fourier utopian socialism References Barry Francis . 1857 . “What Is Marriage?” Social Revolutionist 3 , no. 2 : 42 – 43 . Beecher Jonathan . 1986 . Charles Fourier: The Visionary and His World...
Journal Article
American Literature (2021) 93 (2): 283–305.
Published: 01 June 2021
... and feminist publics, the rise of networked selves, and changes in how we access and interpret Dickinson’s work. A Gallup Poll in June 2020 reported that two out of three Americans said that marriages between same-sex couples should be legally recognized (McCarthy 2020 ). (They also believed...
Journal Article
American Literature 11597526.
Published: 16 December 2024
.... In fact, many of the nineteenth-century women examined in this article rejected marriage, but we may glimpse the biopolitical stakes of their project in the Boston marriages of their time and in legal same-sex marriages in our own. Nineteenth-century queer feminist theories of well-being functioned...
Journal Article
American Literature (2009) 81 (3): 555–582.
Published: 01 September 2009
... as the instabilities of political affiliation. InMiss
Ravenel’s Conversion, the embodied problem of sex, rather than the
civil status of marriage, becomes a working metaphor for the affect
of patriotism. De Forest’s focus on sex is as unusual as his empha-
sis on geographical attachment. Desire was virtually...
Journal Article
American Literature (2003) 75 (2): 367–393.
Published: 01 June 2003
...’’
British novels, like The Well of Loneliness (1928),
or highly experimental modernist works, like Nightwood (1936), have
been the focus of most critical attention to early-twentieth-century
narratives of female same-sex desire...
Journal Article
American Literature (2022) 94 (1): 103–131.
Published: 01 March 2022
... on the titular characters’ debate about whether men and women can be friends without falling into romantic scripts. The peculiar arbitrariness of the sexual example works as a form of rhetorical occultatio: a marriage of concepts masquerading as annulment. While this Battle of the Sexes revision is unusually...
FIGURES
Journal Article
American Literature (2007) 79 (4): 701–724.
Published: 01 December 2007
... social
Queer Families in the Gilded Age 715
formations as an outsider whose difference everyone recognizes but
no one yet stigmatizes.
But what about Harry Lehr’s gayness, the part of him that his wife
regards as his most dramatic difference? In his same-sex...
Journal Article
American Literature (2014) 86 (4): 737–765.
Published: 01 December 2014
... . The Roman Missal . 3rd typical edition, chapel edition . Chicago : Liturgy Training Publications . Colacurcio Michael J. 1984 . The Province of Piety . Cambridge : Harvard Univ. Press . Coontz Stephanie . 2006 . Marriage, A History: How Love Conquered Marriage . New York...
Journal Article
American Literature (2018) 90 (3): 495–522.
Published: 01 September 2018
...Timothy Marshall Griffiths Abstract In this essay I discuss how Charles W. Chesnutt’s The House behind the Cedars —through the tropology of spatialization, illustrations of expansive human intimacy, and indictments of the triangulation of antinormatively gendered and sexed bodies as political...
Journal Article
American Literature (2006) 78 (3): 519–548.
Published: 01 September 2006
...-
petition between ‘‘thousands of clocks’’ has a vertiginous effect, sug-
gesting ‘‘interminable vistas’’ rather than any particular organization
of time. It’s no accident that, in this same scene, the entire meaning of
marriage to Ramy shifts in a similar direction; Ann Eliza is told by the
manager...
Journal Article
American Literature (2017) 89 (2): 279–304.
Published: 01 June 2017
... have formalized their relationships (in the absence of same-sex marriage) by having one party adopt the other, an approach with significant legal consequences. 9 In both cases, the power of queer revisionings of kinship involves how they constellate relational resources (and material support...
Journal Article
American Literature (2002) 74 (2): 315–344.
Published: 01 June 2002
...-
band and wife presumably enter into the contract of marriage as two
independent and equally situated parties who have made an agree-
ment about their property to their mutual advantage, this ‘‘contract
in fact, reflects an unacknowledged sexual division of labor based on
the masculine ‘‘sex-right...
Journal Article
American Literature (2003) 75 (1): 207–209.
Published: 01 March 2003
..., and Whiteness.
By Renée R. Curry. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood. 2000. xii, 184 pp. $62.50.
6815 AMERICAN LITERATURE / 75:1 / sheet 211 of 252 The Color of Sex: Whiteness, Heterosexuality, and the Fictions of White Supremacy.
By Mason Stokes. Durham...
Journal Article
American Literature (2004) 76 (2): 307–337.
Published: 01 June 2004
... claimed that attacking the aging process ‘‘at its
American Literature, Volume 76, Number 2, June 2004. Copyright © 2004 by Duke Uni-
versity Press.
308 American Literature
rootsthe sex organs—regenerated both the body and the mind,
resulting in increased physical and ‘‘psychic alertness’’ (SL, 11...
Journal Article
American Literature (2021) 93 (4): 713–715.
Published: 01 December 2021
... documenting the couple’s premarital sex, the defendant disrobed before the jury to dramatize how her race had been exposed to the groom. Holloway explores the paradox that a society that tolerated “miscegenation” by force also forbade it by marriage. This identified race with illegitimacy and illicit...
Journal Article
American Literature (2006) 78 (3): 487–517.
Published: 01 September 2006
... of gender difference, the novel’s foray
into same-sex desire should not be surprising, especially in light of
the crossings among turn-of-the-century sexology, theories of race,
and anti-immigrant discourse.3 But although studies of sexuality have
been foundational in reconceptualizing the 1890s, oddly...
Journal Article
American Literature (2004) 76 (1): 117–148.
Published: 01 March 2004
..., as one critic has
written, are ‘‘a collection of separate units with almost no relation
to each other 2 Thus, while the novel narrates certain events in the
Hersland family history—births, marriages, deaths—it departs almost
immediately from hereditary progression, instead aiming rather gran...
Journal Article
American Literature (2009) 81 (3): 469–495.
Published: 01 September 2009
... of these same relationships or identities is used to
temper the ideas that Puritans were “puritanical” regarding sex, or
that renunciation was their sexual and emotional modus operandi.16
In contrast, I have no claims to make about the historical emergence
of particular relationships or identities...
Journal Article
American Literature (2002) 74 (2): 345–372.
Published: 01 June 2002
... lost fluid was thought to deplete a
man both physically and intellectually, Alcott counseled libidinal re-
straint within the bounds of marriage.42 He was still more concerned
about the prospect of extramarital sex; and here, again, the antidote
was to privatize social relations...
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