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The culture of love : Victorians to moderns /
https://widenersexualityarchives.org/en/permalink/marc_25412811
Responsibility
Stephen Kern.
Date of Publication
1992.
Format
Text
More detail
Responsibility
Stephen Kern.
Author
Kern, Stephen,
Place of Publication
Cambridge, Massachusetts :
Publisher
Harvard University Press,
Date of Publication
1992.
Physical Description
x, 458 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
Format
Text
ISBN
0674179587
9780674179585
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (pages 413-440) and index.
Contents
Waiting -- Meeting -- Encounter -- Embodiment -- Desire -- Language -- Disclosure -- Kissing -- Gender -- Power -- Others -- Jealousy -- Selfhood -- Proposal -- Wedding -- Sex -- Marriage -- Ending.
Summary
"The Culture of Love interprets the sweeping change in loving that spanned a period when scientific discoveries reduced the terrors and dangers of sex, when new laws gave married women control over their earnings and their bodies, when bold novelists and artists shook off the prudishness and hypocrisy that so paralyzed the Victorians. As public opinion, family pressure, and religious conviction loosened, men and women took charge of their love. Stephen Kern argues that, in contrast to modern sex, Victorian sex was anatomically constricted, spatially confined, morally suspect, deadly serious, and abruptly over. Kern divides love into its elements and traces profound changes in each: from waiting for love to ending it. Most revealing are the daring ways moderns began to talk about their current lovemaking as well as past lovers. While Victorians viewed jealousy as a 'foreign devil, ' moderns began to acknowledge responsibility for it. Desire lost its close tie with mortal sin and became the engine of artistic creation; women's response to the marriage proposal shifted from mere consent to active choice. There were even new possibilities of kissing, beyond the sudden, blind, disembodied, and censored Victorian meeting of lips. Kern's evidence is mainly literature and art, including classic novels by the Brontës, Flaubert, Hugo, Eliot, Hardy, Forster, Colette, Proust, Mann, Joyce, Woolf, Lawrence, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Musil as well as the paintings and sculptures of Millais, Courbet, Gérôme, Rodin, Munch, Klimt, Schiele, Valadon, Chagall, Kandinsky, Kokoschka, Picasso, Matisse, and Brancusi. The book's conceptual foundation comes from Heidegger's existential philosophy, in particular his authentic-inauthentic distinction, which Kern adapts to make his overall interpretation and concluding affirmation of the value of authenticity: 'The moderns may have lost some of the Victorians' delicacy and poignancy, perhaps even some of their heroism, but in exchange became more reflective of what it means to be a human being in love and hence better able to make that loving more their very own.'"--Publisher's description.
Kern divides love into its elements and traces profound changes in each. Evidence is mainly literature and art including classic novels, paintings, and sculptures. The books conceptual foundation comes from Heidegger's existential philosophy.
Subjects
Love in literature.
Love in art.
Literature, Modern
Collection
Wolfgram Memorial Lbrary Collection
Call Number
PN56.L6 K47 1992
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