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British History - Religious Aspects, 19th Century British History - Victorian Era (1837-1901), Sex, Marriage & Family - History, Europe - Civilization, History, Religious, Europe - Church History, Imperialism, Gender Identity, Colonialism & Imperialism -
Mansex Fine by David Alderson — book cover

Mansex Fine

by David Alderson
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Overview

When Charles Kingsley accused John Henry Newman of a typically Catholic disregard for truth, his charge that Newman therefore lacked manliness highlighted the importance of religious debates to Victorian perceptions of gender. Moreover, Kingsley’s subsequent polemic reflected more pervasive fears about the potential influence of Catholicism on the British imperial state. Mansex Fine sets controversies such as this in a broad historical context, and interrogates the ideological connections between religion, gender and nation in nineteenth-century Britain. In detailed discussions of important figures whose writing often have a complex relationship to these debates—including not only Kingsley and Newman, but also Gerard Manley Hopkins and Oscar Wilde—David Alderson provides illuminating discussions of the ways in which manliness came to be defined against both Catholicism and revolutionary movements and fed more generally into British imperial culture. Tensions between the celebration of manliness and expressions of male same-sex desire are also an important feature of the book’s concerns.

About the Author, David Alderson

David Alderson is Lecturer in Literary Studies at Staffordshire University.

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Editorials


...Mansex Fine offers today's readers a salutary reminder of Ireland's central place in the imperial imagination of the nineteenth century.

Victorian Studies

...Mansex Fine offers today's readers a salutary reminder of Ireland's central place in the imperial imagination of the nineteenth century.

Booknews

Alderson (literary studies, Staffordshire U.) offers an account of the ways in which manliness came to be defined against both Catholicism and revolution, how it fed more generally into British imperial culture, and how it became a part of colonial perceptions of Ireland, incorporating analyses of writers including Austen, Charlotte Bront<:e>, Kingley, J.H. Newman, Hopkins, and Wilde. Examined in depth are the tensions between manliness and male same-sex desire in 19th century British literature. Distributed by St. Martin's Press. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknew.com)

Book Details

Published
December 31, 1998
Publisher
Manchester : Manchester University Press, 1998.
Pages
224
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780719052750

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