Skip to main content
Palgrave Macmillan

Innocence and Rapture

The Erotic Child in Pater, Wilde, James, and Nabokov

  • Book
  • © 2005

Overview

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this book

eBook USD 39.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book USD 54.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info
Hardcover Book USD 54.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Durable hardcover edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access

Licence this eBook for your library

Institutional subscriptions

Table of contents (5 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

Taking as its focus the erotic child in decadent aesthetics, this book explores the sexual and political stakes of an aestheticistexperience of rapture. Ohi examines the power of the work of art to transport, to disorient, to move, to extort the equivocal pleasuresof self-loss. He also explores how the beautiful child offers partisans of 'art for art's sake' an emblem for the ecstatic and erotic, even the queer possibilities of art. Aestheticism's erotic child is thus in stark contrast to the innocent child of today's ideology, who secures the claims of identity against the very disorientations celebrated by aestheticism. Articulating aesthetic transport through the desiring and desired child, aestheticism interrogates the ideology underpinning sexual oppression.

Reviews

"Beautiful, judicious, and finely wrought. Ohi s wonderfully absorbing study shows how 'style' and 'the child' are wed to each other in famous aestheticizing texts: both are a kind of erotic allure, an occasion for rapture, that thwarts assigned cultural contents and luxuriates in disorientations. This is a smart, agile argument, in a book as rigorous as it is relevant to current cultural panics over childhood. With an intelligence as expansive as the sexual possibilities he considers, Ohi drops deep anchors into texts that repay our attention with broad theoretical and political concerns. Keenly, we are shown why embracing the child (with its belligerent mysteries attached to its wandering sexualities) demands the close, imaginative readings Kevin Ohi so brilliantly performs. A distinguished achievement." - Kathryn Stockton, The University of Utah

"We've been blessed in the last decade with several distinguished and profitably subversive books investigating the eroticism evoked by and manufactured into the figure of the child. Kevin Ohi's is the finest of these. The only thing wrong with this book is the modesty of the title, which may not suggest the extraordinary originality and sweep of this irresistibly precise and witty study. We often speak of daring work as "unsettling," and certainly that word could be used here, but Ohi is much more than a rattler. He expands our vision and knowledge, writes not only with precision but generosity, doesn't so much explain as make possible. Ohi is the once-in-the-bluest-moon intellectual who cannot help being persuasive and, in my view, right. He makes us all so much smarter than we were, than we have any right to be." - James R. Kincaid, University of Southern California

About the author

KEVIN OHI is Assistant Professor of English at Boston College, USA.

Bibliographic Information

Publish with us