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				First published: September 1, 2024 - Last updated: September 1, 2024
			TITLE INFORMATION 
			
			Author: Catherine Reedy
			
 Title: Infected Fancies and Penetrative Poetics in The Rape of Lucrece
 
 Subtitle: -
 
 In: Historicizing the Embodied Imagination in Early Modern English Literature
 
 Edited by: Mark Kaethler and Grant Williams
 
 Place: Cham
 
 Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
 
 Year: 2024 (Published online: July 8, 2024)
 
 Pages: 109-128
 
 ISB-13: 9783031550638 (print) - 
				Find a Library: 
					Wikipedia, 
					WorldCat | 
				ISBN-13: 9783031550645 (online) - 
				Find a Library: 
					Wikipedia, 
					WorldCat
 
 Language: English
 
 Keywords: 
				Modern History: 
					16th Century | 
				European History: 
					English History | 
				Cases: 
					Mythological Victims / 
						Lucretia; 
				Types: 
					Rape
				Representations: 
					Literary Texts / 
						William Shakespeare
 
 FULL TEXT
 
			
			Links:
			- Google Books (Limited Preview)
 
 - SpringerLink (Restricted Access)
 
 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
			
			Author:
				Catherine Reedy, 
					English and Creative Writing, 
					Lake Forest College
			
 Abstract: 
				»This chapter explores the ways in which sensation infects and penetrates the embodied imaginations at play in Shakespeare’s narrative poem of rape and trauma, The Rape of Lucrece. Far from a disembodied, ornamental set piece overwhelmed by rhetorical excess, Shakespeare’s poem deeply engages with physically rendered imaginations, from Tarquin’s infected “fancy” to Lucrece’s disjointed conceits, as he draws from the imagination’s dangerous link to a world of unruly sensations. Even more, Shakespeare broadens his scope to consider art, from bird songs to his poem itself, as an intimate and dangerous enterprise forged out of the fraught relationship between sensation and the imagination. This chapter contextualizes Shakespeare’s poem within the period’s wider penetrative poetics and the trade of Lucretia objects from citterns to sealing rings in order to show how Shakespeare critiques the patriarchal aesthetics that had become a conventional part of this classical story of sexual violence. Pushing against the masculine fantasies of objectification and rational wills, Shakespeare ultimately offers an alternative form of readership—one fragmentary and richly connected to the unwieldy world of sensation—in his rejection of the period’s penetrative poetics.« 
				(Source: SpringerLink)
 
 Wikipedia: 
				History of Europe: 
					History of England / 
						Elizabethan era | 
				Literature: 
					English literature / 
						William Shakespeare | 
				Literature: 
					Poems about rape / 
						The Rape of Lucrece | 
				Myth: 
					Roman mythology / 
						Lucretia | 
				Sex and the law: 
					Rape / 
						History of rape
 |