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Precious Perversions : Humor, Homosexuality, and the Southern Literary Canon /

The tragic sentiment of Southern literature and its heteronormative perspective are foundational attributes generally accepted by both popular and scholarly audiences. Yet a pantheon of great authors ranging from like Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Truman Capote to present-day voices of A...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Pugh, Tison (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Baton Rouge : Louisiana State University Press, [2016]
Colección:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo

MARC

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245 1 0 |a Precious Perversions :   |b Humor, Homosexuality, and the Southern Literary Canon /   |c Tison Pugh. 
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490 0 |a Southern literary studies 
505 0 |a Cover; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction: Precious Perversions; 1 Camp Sadomasochism in Tennessee Williams's Plays; 2 Laughing with Truman Capote: Insult, Camp, and Gothic Excess; 3 Florence King's Queer Conservatism and the Gender Politics of Southern Humor; 4 Rita Mae Brown's Queer Feminism and the Gender Politics of Southern Humor; 5 Dorothy Allison's Bravado and the Comic Limits of Trauma; 6 David Sedaris's Humor of the Postsouthern South: Place, Race, and Queer Desire; Conclusion: Precious Perversions and the Southern Literary Canon; Notes; Works Cited; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F; G 
505 0 |a HI; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R; S; T; U; V; W; Y; Z 
520 |a The tragic sentiment of Southern literature and its heteronormative perspective are foundational attributes generally accepted by both popular and scholarly audiences. Yet a pantheon of great authors ranging from like Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Truman Capote to present-day voices of Alice Walker, John Waters, and David Sedaris, collectively attest to both the vibrancy of queer experience and the prevalence of humor found in this rich regional cannon. In Precious Perversions: Humor, Homosexuality, and the Southern Literary Canon, Tison Pugh challenges the premises that elevate William Faulkner and diminish Florence King, that esteem Walker Percy yet marginalize David Sedaris, by arguing for the inclusion of gay comic authors as long-standing, defining voices in the field. By redefining the tenets of Southern literature Pugh reveals long-overlooked or discounted aspects of gay humor within the South's literary realm. Noting, for example, that Tennessee Williams is revered as a dramatist who probes the heart of the human condition rather than for his submerged camp humor, and Truman Capote's comic cinema and literature never eclipsed serious works, Pugh establishes a history of mainstream and academic critique that ignored queer humor. Likewise, Florence King and Rita Mae Brown wrote defining narratives of Southern lesbian experience in, respectively, Confessions of a Failed Southern Lady and Rubyfruit Jungle, yet, according to Pugh, they are almost entirely neglected in accounts of the literary South. More recently, the author shows, the critical reception of Dorothy Allison's Bastard Out of Carolina testifies to an overarching interest in the traumatic aspects of her poetry and fiction rather than in her humor and its cathartic power. Pugh also asserts that David Sedaris, as a writer of the "post-Southern South," who appears to fall beyond the parameters of regional literature for many readers, creates a new, humorous vision of the region that recognizes both its pained history and its grudging accession to modernity. Drawing from works of key southern writers Pugh sets forth a new vision of Southern literature emerges -- one illuminated by the humor of gay voices no longer at the margins. 
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650 0 |a Humor in literature. 
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