Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Homosexuality and literature: an introduction
- Part I Repression and Legitimation
- 1 Homosexual writing on trial: from Fanny Hill to Gay News
- 2 Psychoanalysis, homosexuality and modernism
- 3 Lesbian modernism: writing in and beyond the closet
- 4 The erotics of transgression
- 5 Normality and queerness in gay fiction
- Part II Affiliations
- Part III Literary Traditions
- Guide to further reading
- Index
4 - The erotics of transgression
from Part I - Repression and Legitimation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 January 2011
- Frontmatter
- Homosexuality and literature: an introduction
- Part I Repression and Legitimation
- 1 Homosexual writing on trial: from Fanny Hill to Gay News
- 2 Psychoanalysis, homosexuality and modernism
- 3 Lesbian modernism: writing in and beyond the closet
- 4 The erotics of transgression
- 5 Normality and queerness in gay fiction
- Part II Affiliations
- Part III Literary Traditions
- Guide to further reading
- Index
Summary
“O brilliant kids, frisk with your dog, / Fondle your shells and sticks, bleached / By time and the elements; but there is a line / You must not cross nor ever trust beyond it / Spry cordage of your bodies to caresses / Too lichen-faithful from too wide a breast. / The bottom of the sea is cruel. ” / A vivid warning about transgression, these lines by the modern American poet Hart Crane conclude the initial poem of 'Voyages', a lyric sequence inspired by his maritime lover Emil Opffer. The penalty for crossing the line here is death, figured as an ineluctable embrace by the sea, whose 'caresses' represent a fatal union. Yet the poemdoes exactly what it warns against, with its strongly enjambed syntax luring readers across the line before we're aware of the transgression ('but there is a line / You must not cross'). As the heavy caesurae of the stanza's opening lines give way to the enjambment of those that follow, so the innocent, earth-bound identities are overtaken by the dark dissolution of the sea. The boundary that is crossed not only separates one line of poetry from another but also divides shore from sea, innocence from experience, childhood from adulthood and this world from the next. The 'line / You must not cross' thus suggests an ontological limit as well as a formal division.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Gay and Lesbian Writing , pp. 65 - 80Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
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