
Disenchanted Modernity in Robert Kroetsch's The Studhorse Man : Biology and Culture; Sex and Gender; Eugenics and Contraception; Writing and Reading.
Title:
Disenchanted Modernity in Robert Kroetsch's The Studhorse Man : Biology and Culture; Sex and Gender; Eugenics and Contraception; Writing and Reading.
Author:
Zichy, Francis.
ISBN:
9781453900680
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (259 pages)
Contents:
Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments vii -- Preface ix -- Introduction -- Modernity and Disenchantment 1 -- Chapter One -- Contexts and Critics 5 -- Chapter Two -- Who Gave Hazard Lepage His First Horse? Or, Answering Questions with Questions 11 -- Chapter Three -- Who is Demeter Proudfoot? Eugenics, Sterilization, and Contraception 19 -- Chapter Four -- Naming "the Studhorse Man Himself" 31 -- Chapter Five -- Did Demeter's Mother Know Greek Mythology? 47 -- Chapter Six -- The Acts of the Apostles 57 -- Chapter Seven -- Sex and Gender in The Studhorse Man 69 -- Chapter Eight -- Being Not So Clearly Male in The Studhorse Man 85 -- Chapter Nine -- "Men in Love," Part I 113 -- Chapter Ten -- "Men in Love," Part II: Obsession as Liberation 125 -- Chapter Eleven -- Smoking a Peace Pipe with the Poundkeeper 135 -- Chapter Twelve -- The Artist's Salvation, and the Natural Man's Destiny 149 -- Chapter Thirteen -- "Four Fingers and a Thumb": Sex, Breeding, and Love 167 -- Chapter Fourteen -- The Penis Cannot Make Water Lilies: God, Nature, Culture, and Modernity 179 -- Chapter Fifteen -- Conclusion: Death and the Phallus in The Studhorse Man 203 -- Notes 209 -- Works Cited 231 -- Index 241.
Abstract:
This book undertakes a detailed reading of Robert Kroetsch's The Studhorse Man, examining this Canadian novel in its transnational historical and socio-cultural context. Key subject headings are biology and culture, sex and gender, eugenics and contraception, writing and reading. The overarching theme is disenchanted modernity in the twentieth-century, the systematic displacement of the divine and natural order by a humanly ordained social regime, and by forms of social engineering that brought to bear the full force of modern science, invasively to alter the most fundamental conditions of human life. The more immediate literary frames of reference are Greek mythology, early Christian debates on the body and marriage, and the lore of the North American Aboriginal trickster, as these are deployed and alluded to in Kroetsch's novel. In establishing the sources and contexts of The Studhorse Man, this study examines Robert Kroetsch's early drafts of the novel, and his many notes taken and clippings assembled during its composition. An effort has been made to appeal to a wide range of general and academic readers alike by avoiding specialized jargon and adopting a cross-disciplinary approach. This book will be of interest to scholars of literature and literary theory, and of use in courses on literature and the novel, on masculinity and gender studies, and on cultural history in the twentieth century.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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