’We Cannot Be Greek Now’: Age Difference, Corruption and the Making of Sexual Inversion.
Funke, Jana
Date: 2013
Journal
English Studies: a Journal of English Language and Literature
Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Publisher DOI
Abstract
A Problem in Greek Ethics, A Problem in Modern Ethics and “Soldier Love” indicate
that John Addington Symonds responded carefully to social anxieties regarding the
influence and corruption of youth and placed increasing emphasis on presenting male
same-sex desire as consensual and age-consistent. Situating Symonds’s work in the ...
A Problem in Greek Ethics, A Problem in Modern Ethics and “Soldier Love” indicate
that John Addington Symonds responded carefully to social anxieties regarding the
influence and corruption of youth and placed increasing emphasis on presenting male
same-sex desire as consensual and age-consistent. Situating Symonds’s work in the social
and political context of the 1880s and 1890s, the article opens up a more complex
understanding of Symonds’s reception of Greece. It also offers a new reading of his
collaboration with Havelock Ellis by arguing that Symonds’s insistence on age-equal and
reciprocal relationships between men strongly shaped Sexual Inversion. This shows that
concerns about age difference and ideals of equality and reciprocity began to impact
debates about male same-sex desire in the late nineteenth century – earlier than is
generally assumed.
English
Collections of Former Colleges
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