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Celibacies

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Arguing that celibacy is a distinct sexuality with its own practices and pleasures, Benjamin Kahan shows it to be much more than the renunciation of sex or a cover for homosexuality.
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  • 25 November 2013
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In this innovative study, Benjamin Kahan traces the elusive history of modern celibacy. Arguing that celibacy is a distinct sexuality with its own practices and pleasures, Kahan shows it to be much more than the renunciation of sex or a cover for homosexuality. Celibacies focuses on a diverse group of authors, social activists, and artists, spanning from the suffragettes to Henry James, and from the Harlem Renaissance's Father Divine to Andy Warhol. This array of figures reveals the many varieties of celibacy that have until now escaped scholars of literary modernism and sexuality. Ultimately, this book wrests the discussion of celibacy and sexual restraint away from social and religious conservatism, resituating celibacy within a history of political protest and artistic experimentation. Celibacies offers an entirely new perspective on this little-understood sexual identity and initiates a profound reconsideration of the nature and constitution of sexuality.
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Price: $31.95
Pages: 232
Publisher: Duke University Press
Imprint: Duke University Press
Publication Date: 25 November 2013
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780822355687
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"This original and long-needed book on modern celibacy as a distinctive kind of sexuality—as opposed to the lack or negation of sexuality, or symptom of the repression of sexuality—holds true to its promise to show us just how richly varied celibacy can be, and how vital it in fact was to U.S. and British modernism. As Benjamin Kahan shows through insightful readings of texts by Henry James, Mina Loy, Marianne Moore, W. H. Auden, Father Divine, and Andy Warhol, among others, modernist celibacies were secular as well as religious, collectivizing as well as individualizing, sensuous as well as ascetic; celibacies were also capable of being feminist, erotic, strategic, and episodic. Attentive to celibacy as both practice and identity, Celibacies will be indispensable reading for queer theory and modernist studies."—Sianne Ngai, author of Our Aesthetic Categories: Zany, Cute, Interesting

Benjamin Kahan is Assistant Professor of English and Women's and Gender Studies at Louisiana State University.

Acknowledgments

Introduction. The Expressive Hypothesis

1. The Longue Durée of Celibacy: Boston Marriage, Female Friendship, and the Invention of Homosexuality

2. Celibate Time

3. The Other Harlem Renaissance: Father Divine, Celibate Economics, and the Making of Black Sexuality

4. The Celibate American: Closetedness, Emigration, and Queer Citizenship before Stonewall

5. Philosophical Bachelorhood, Philosophical Spinsterhood, and Celibate Modernity

Conclusion. Asexuality/Neutrality/Relationality

Notes

Bibliography

Index