opfjewel.blogg.se

Jean cocteau querelle
Jean cocteau querelle










jean cocteau querelle

If you cannot sign in, please contact your librarian.

jean cocteau querelle

If your institution is not listed or you cannot sign in to your institution’s website, please contact your librarian or administrator.Įnter your library card number to sign in. Following successful sign in, you will be returned to Oxford Academic.Do not use an Oxford Academic personal account. When on the institution site, please use the credentials provided by your institution.Select your institution from the list provided, which will take you to your institution's website to sign in.Click Sign in through your institution.Shibboleth / Open Athens technology is used to provide single sign-on between your institution’s website and Oxford Academic. This authentication occurs automatically, and it is not possible to sign out of an IP authenticated account.Ĭhoose this option to get remote access when outside your institution. Typically, access is provided across an institutional network to a range of IP addresses. If you are a member of an institution with an active account, you may be able to access content in one of the following ways: Get help with access Institutional accessĪccess to content on Oxford Academic is often provided through institutional subscriptions and purchases. The novel strives to produce the experience of a reader’s participation in the non-referential aspects of sexual culture, so that that reader might feel culture happening while reading, in particular that part of a culture that cannot be found simply in the denotational value of the words on the page. It is an instrument that calls attention to the myriad ways people invoke culture to act in the world. Querelle is, in the end, not simply a space of representation in which various referential aspects of sexual culture can be recorded. Genet’s novel studies both the highly structured, predictable set of sexual forms, through which people usually move in their daily round, and also the situations that arise when some unusual social agent moves through those forms unpredictably, throwing standard schemes of perception and relevance out of kilter. This chapter explores the way Jean Genet’s novel, Querelle, can be read as a theorization of the process of acquiring those social structures that ground sexual interaction and sexual expression Querelle can be read as an ethnography of the interaction genres that occasionally make coherent sexual interaction between men possible in a multicultural environment (and also occasionally fail to do so).












Jean cocteau querelle