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Clever Little Books

Martial's Epigrams and Sexual Knowledge in Early Modern Europe

Ian Frederick Moulton

$189.95   $161.46

Hardback

Forthcoming
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English
University of Toronto Press
01 February 2025
Clever Little Books explores the role of Latin commentaries on the Roman poet Martial as a medium for the transmission of sexual knowledge among male elites in early modern Europe. Valued for its wit and concision, Martial's sometimes shocking poetry was highly regarded in early modern humanist culture, and editions with detailed scholarly commentary circulated widely.

Clever Little Books explores how unexpurgated editions of Martial's poetry created a significant cultural space for discourse on illicit and non-procreative sexual practices in the early modern period. The early modern commentaries give detailed information on all aspects of sexuality described in the poems, and they constitute a fundamental site of encounter of the early modern period with the world of antiquity. Drawing on early modern scholarly discourse around canonical Latin poetry, as well as handwritten marginal commentary by individual readers such as the English playwright Ben Jonson, Ian Frederick Moulton traces the conflict between ancient sexual mores and the sexual culture and traditions of Renaissance Europe, including later attempts to censor Martial's texts.

By focusing on the sexual knowledge transmitted through editions of Martial, Clever Little Books sheds light on an overlooked but important aspect of early modern sexual discourses, attitudes, and knowledge.
By:  
Imprint:   University of Toronto Press
Country of Publication:   Canada
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 25mm
Weight:   1g
ISBN:   9781487558338
ISBN 10:   1487558333
Pages:   256
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Imitations of Martial: Antonio Beccadelli’s Hermaphroditus 2. Endless Commentary: Perotti’s Cornucopiae 3. Varieties of Sexual Activity in Martial and the Joint Commentary 4. How Ben Jonson Read His Martial 5. Martial Castrated: Early Modern Censorship of Martial Works Cited Index

Ian Frederick Moulton is President's Professor of English and Cultural History at Arizona State University.

Reviews for Clever Little Books: Martial's Epigrams and Sexual Knowledge in Early Modern Europe

""Clever Little Books is an engaging and enlightening read. Ian Moulton reveals how Latin commentaries on Martial's celebrated epigrams became a crucial medium for sexual knowledge among the educated elites of Renaissance Europe. In addition to the guaranteed interest of Martial's epigrams, the materials that the author treats--commentaries, editions, annotations--are fascinating in their own right, and largely unknown, even to an academic readership. While bringing to bear a tremendous amount of scholarly work, Moulton remains a clear and direct guide: Clever Little Books an important contribution to studies of Martial and the classical tradition in the Renaissance, and to the history of sexuality.""--Alan Stewart, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University ""In Clever Little Books, Ian Moulton explores the defenses as well as the more familiar denigrations of sex acts as they are represented in humanist scholarship and commentaries on Martial's epigrams. Martial meant his poems to be bracing and Moulton cleaves to his chosen poet's determination to arouse mixed emotions and concentrated thought. The chapter on Jonson's heavily annotated quarto of Martial's epigrams is a welcome contribution to Jonson criticism. It also serves to focus attention on the Italian humanist traditions that tend to be sidelined in recent criticism of the English Renaissance. This book insists that scholars look seriously at the classical models of writing on sex and stigma.""--Heather James, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of Southern California ""In writing about 'clever little books' Ian Moulton has produced his own brilliant book, a taut and clearly focused analysis of Martial's impact on renaissance sexuality. Moulton shows that Martial was both prurient and moralistic, denigrating many forms of sexual behaviour in his satirical epigrams, which were read with a mixture of enthusiasm and horror by the male educated elite.--Andrew Hadfield, Professor of English, University of Sussex


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