List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1 Sex and Violence, or Nature and Art
Chapter 2 The Birth of the Western Eye
Chapter 3 Apollo and Dionysus
Chapter 4 Pagan Beauty
Chapter 5 Renaissance Form: Italian Art
Chapter 6 Spenser and Apollo: The Faerie Queene
Chapter 7 Shakespeare and Dionysus: As You Like It and Antony and
Cleopatra
Chapter 8 Return of the Great Mother: Rousseau vs. Sade
Chapter 9 Amazons, Mothers, Ghosts: Goethe to Gothic
Chapter 10 Sex Bound and Unbound: Blake
Chapter 11 Marriage to Mother Nature: Wordsworth
Chapter 12 The Daemon as Lesbian Vampire: Coleridge
Chapter 13 Speed and Space: Byron
Chapter 14 Light and Heat: Shelley and Keats
Chapter 15 Cults of Sex and Beauty: Balzac
Chapter 16 Cults of Sex and Beauty: Gautier, Baudelaire, and
Huysmans
Chapter 17 Romantic Shadows: Emily Bronte
Chapter 18 Romantic Shadows: Swinburne and Pater
Chapter 19 Apollo Daemonized: Decadent Art
Chapter 20 The Beautiful Boy as Destroyer: Wilde's The Picture of
Dorian Gray
Chapter 21 The English Epicene: Wilde's The Importance of Being
Earnest
Chapter 22 American Decadents: Poe, Hawthorne, Melville
Chapter 23 American Decadents: Emerson, Whitman, James
Chapter 24 Amherst's Madame de Sade: Emily Dickinson
Notes
Index
CAMILLE PAGLIA is the University Professor of Humanities and Media Studies at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. A regular contributor to Salon.com, she is the author of Glittering Images; Break, Blow, Burn; Sexual Personae; Sex, Art, and American Culture; and Vamps & Tramps.
"A remarkable book, at once outrageous and compelling, fanatical
and brilliant.... One must be awed by [Paglia's] vast energy,
erudition and wit." —The Washington Post
“Sexual Personae [is] an enormous sensation of a book, in all the
better senses of ‘sensation.’ There is no book comparable in scope,
stance, design or insight.” —Harold Bloom
“The ability to infuriate both antagonists in an ideological
struggle is often a sign of a first-rate book.... [Paglia] is a
conspicuously gifted writer ... and an admirably close reader with
a hard core of common sense.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Paglia marshals a vast array of ... cultural materials with an
authorial voice derived from sixties acid-rock lead guitar....
Close to poetry.” —Greil Marcus, author of Lipstick Traces
“This book is a red comet in a smog-filled sky.... Brilliant.” —The
Nation
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