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The Sexual Culture of the French Renaissance: 14 (Cambridge Social and Cultural Histories, Series Number 14)

The Sexual Culture of the French Renaissance: 14 (Cambridge Social and Cultural Histories, Series Number 14)

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Katherine Crawford
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 4/22/2010
EAN 9780521769891, ISBN10: 0521769892

Hardcover, 312 pages, 24.9 x 15.2 x 2 cm
Language: English

When the French invaded Italy in 1494, they were shocked by the frank sexuality expressed in Italian cities. By 1600, the French were widely considered to be the most highly sexualized nation in Christendom. What caused this transformation? This book examines how, as Renaissance textual practices and new forms of knowledge rippled outward from Italy, the sexual landscape and French notions of masculinity, sexual agency, and procreation were fundamentally changed. Exploring the use of astrology, the infusion of Neoplatonism, the critique of Petrarchan love poetry, and the monarchy's sexual reputation, the book reveals that the French encountered conflicting ideas from abroad and from antiquity about the meanings and implications of sexual behavior. Intensely interested in cultural self-definition, humanists, poets, and political figures all contributed to the rapid alteration of sexual ideas to suit French cultural needs. The result was the vibrant sexual reputation that marks French culture to this day.

Introduction
sexual culture? France? Renaissance?
1. The renaissance of sex
Orpheus, mythography and making sexual meaning
2. Heavens below
astrology, generation and sexual (un)certainty
3. Neoplatonism and the making of heterosexuality
4. Cupid makes you stupid
'bad' poetry in the French Renaissance
5. Politics, promiscuity and potency
managing the king's sexual reputation
Conclusion
dirty thoughts
Bibliography.

'Beautifully written, lively, and original, Katherine Crawford's study of French Renaissance sexual culture makes a compelling case for reading sexuality through poetry, poetic theory, astrology, and philosophy in unusual ways. Providing an anatomy of some of the lesser-examined elements that contribute to the development of sexual ideology in a given culture, The Sexual Culture of the French Renaissance makes an important contribution, not only to the study of sexuality in Renaissance France, but to sexuality studies more generally.' Carla Freccero, University of California, Santa Cruz