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Cover image for book The Poetry of Kissing in Early Modern Europe

The Poetry of Kissing in Early Modern Europe

From the Catullan Revival to Secundus, Shakespeare and the English Cavaliers
By:Alex Wong
Publisher:Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Print ISBN:9781843844662
eText ISBN:9781787440302
Edition:1
Copyright:2017
Format:Page Fidelity

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The "kissing-poem" genre was wide-spread in Renaissance literature; this book surveys its form and development.

There is a great deal of kissing in Renaissance poetry, but modern critics do not generally recognise (as early readers did) that the literary conventions of the kiss were closely related to a fully-formed, lively and popular genre of Neo-Latin "kissing-poems". Beginning with the imitation of Catullus in fifteenth-century Italy, this specialised form was securely established in the next century by the Dutch poet Janus Secundus, whose elegant Basia ("Kisses") were an extraordinary international success. Secundus stimulated a long-lived tradition of Latin and vernacular "kisses", willfully repetitious and yet meticulously varied, which can tell us much about humanist poetics.
This book offers a critical account of the Renaissance kiss-poem, using an abundance of vivid and often racy examples, many of them drawn from authors who are all but forgotten today. It shows that the genre had a sophisticated rationale and clear but flexible conventions. These include habits of irony, mood and structure that proved widely influential, and some slippery, self-conscious ways of dealing with masculine sexuality. Presenting new readings of English writers including Sidney, Shakespeare and Donne, the study also reminds us how important Neo-Latin writing was to the literary culture of early modern Britain. A number of well known texts are thus placed in a context unfamiliar to most modern scholars, in order to show how deftly their kisses engage with an international tradition of humanist poetry.

Alex Wong is currently a Research Fellow in English literature at St John's College, University of Cambridge.