Sensuous Embodiment in The Eve of St. Agnes

dc.contributor.authorHousser, Kathie
dc.date.issued2010
dc.description.abstractThis article explores the embodied language Keats uses in The Eve of St. Agnes to capture the senses and emotions of his characters within a framework of contrasts such as life and death, heat and cold, and youth and age. Through a close examination of these and related pairings, which are so effectively established in the opening forty-one lines, this essay highlights the sensuality of Keats’s text, and focuses particularly on the often overlooked or ignored incipient sexuality of the young heroine, Madeline. By doing so, it demonstrates that the crucial scene between Madeline and Porphyro ought to be viewed as love-making between equals, rather than as a seduction.
dc.format.volume1
dc.identifier.issn1923-4996
dc.identifier.urihttp://journals.library.mun.ca/ojs/index.php/ate/article/view/93/48
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14783/15326
dc.language.isoen
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherMemorial University
dc.subjectJohn Keats; The Eve of St. Agnes; Madeline; sexuality; the senses; sensuality; the body; contrasts; religious imagery; Christian iconography
dc.titleSensuous Embodiment in The Eve of St. Agnes
dc.typearticle
mem.campusSt. John's Campus
mem.departmentMemorial University Libraries
mem.divisionsLibraries
mem.fullTextStatuspublic
mem.isPublishedpub
mem.pageRange115-136
mem.refereedTrue
oaire.citation.issueat the EDGE

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