Such Is My Love: A Study of Shakespeare's Sonnets

by Joseph Pequigney

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This book discusses the possibilityy of a homoerotic interpretation of Shakespeare's sonnets. It gives minute attention to the text as well as to the extensive scholarship which has generally resisted such an interpretation.

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This was amusing. Scholars have gone into contortions to avoid or confute the blindingly obvious fact that Shakespeare wrote love sonnets to a guy. That no, this wasn't part of a friendship tradition -- nothing traditional about them. That yes, the Sonnets are explicitly sexual (in his witty way). Pequigney mocks and teases the scholars who can't cope, and that makes for a funny book.

However, he's a Freudian. He thinks the Freudian theory of homosexuality (excuse me?) fits the Sonnets nicely. I know this will put a few people off, but it's worth it for the other parts of the book. The story he draws from the Sonnets convinces me more than what Katherine Duncan-Jones derives in her edition, which is famous for being the 1st not to be show more awkward with the sexuality (did we catch up with you in four centuries, Will?). But Pequigney is even more at ease with the Sonnets as they are -- except when Freud leads him astray. show less

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Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Poetry, Literature Studies and Criticism, LGBTQ+
DDC/MDS
821.3Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesBritish Poetry1558-1625
LCC
PR2848 .P46Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish renaissance (1500-1640)
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30
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924,613
Reviews
1
Rating
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Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2