Jonathan Swift in the Company of WomenOxford University Press, 2006. dec. 7. - 238 oldal Jonathan Swift was the subject of gossip and criticism in his own time concerning his relations with women and his representations of them in his writings. For over twenty years he regarded Esther Johnson, "Stella," as "his most valuable friend," yet he is reputed never to have seen her alone. From his time to our own there has been speculation that the two were secretly married--since their relationship seemed so inexplicable then and now. For thirteen of the years that Swift seemed committed to Stella as the acknowledged woman in his life, he maintained a clandestine--but apparently also nonsexual--relationship with another woman, Esther Van Homrigh, or "Vanessa." Jonathan Swift in the Company of Women looks again at these much-examined relationships and at others that reveal Swift as a man who enjoyed the company of a number of women as pupils and as ministrants to his various needs. Swift, a man with a complex private life, was also a writer whose satiric portraits of women could be unsparing. While Swift often criticized women for frivolous pastimes and idle chatter, his most notorious texts on women image their bodies as loathsome: as he once wrote in a serious political tract, a woman is a "nauseous, unwholesome carcass." Such representations cross a line by showing a repugnance for women as a sex, the biological other. They have led, not surprisingly, to repeated charges of misogyny, an issue that Jonathan Swift in the Company of Women addresses at some length. This first book-length treatment of Swift and women comprehensively examines Swift's attitude toward women in all their manifestations in his work and life: as intimates, acquaintances, protégés, wives, mothers, nurses, disobedient daughters, young women who marry older men, and--finally--as poets and critics. |
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viii. oldal
... friendship and collegiality, did their best to take the photo themselves; and lastly, to Andrew Carpenter for connecting me with Davison and Associates, whose professionals succeeded in producing the photo used in the book. Robert J ...
... friendship and collegiality, did their best to take the photo themselves; and lastly, to Andrew Carpenter for connecting me with Davison and Associates, whose professionals succeeded in producing the photo used in the book. Robert J ...
4. oldal
... friendship with and approbation of individual women. The closest and most satisfying of his relationships with women was with Esther Johnson, an intimate friendship that endured from youth into middle age and ended only with her death ...
... friendship with and approbation of individual women. The closest and most satisfying of his relationships with women was with Esther Johnson, an intimate friendship that endured from youth into middle age and ended only with her death ...
6. oldal
... friendship and collaborative publications, but in many respects they are not well suited to such assimilation. Born twenty-one years after Swift, Pope is a true man of the eighteenth century, who also belonged to the minority Catholic ...
... friendship and collaborative publications, but in many respects they are not well suited to such assimilation. Born twenty-one years after Swift, Pope is a true man of the eighteenth century, who also belonged to the minority Catholic ...
13. oldal
... friendship. References to the beauty of Stella and Vanessa are abstract and hurriedly presented; in the poems for Stella, allusions to her physical person typically draw attention to the effects of age. Swift intends to draw a sharp ...
... friendship. References to the beauty of Stella and Vanessa are abstract and hurriedly presented; in the poems for Stella, allusions to her physical person typically draw attention to the effects of age. Swift intends to draw a sharp ...
28. oldal
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