1st Edition
Queer Reading Practices and Sexology in Fin-de-Siècle Literature Wilde, Stenbock, Prime-Stevenson
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Homophilia and Hungarophilia
Chapter 1: (Con)texts of Same-Sex Desire: Medico-Legal Discourses and Literature
Chapter 2: Literary Snares in Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray and Teleny
Chapter 3: Gothic Performance: Homophile Conceptual Muddle in Eric Stenbock’s ‘The True Story of a Vampire’
Chapter 4: False Snares and Sexology in Edward Prime-Stevenson’s ‘Homosexual Romance’
Conclusions and Afterword: Whatever Happened to Reading Hungarophilia Anthologically
Bibliography
Index
Biography
Zsolt Bojti is a senior lecturer in the Department of English Studies of ELTE Eötvös Loránd University (Budapest, Hungary) and is the editor-in-chief of the Department’s scholarly journal, The AnaChronisT. His research focuses on the intersection of nineteenth-century German sexology and the English literary history of sexuality at the turn of the century.
“Zsolt Bojti’s Queer Reading Practices and Sexology in Fin-de-Siècle Literature: Wilde, Stenbock, Prime-Stevenson is a welcome contribution to nineteenth-century studies. Bojti’s re/discovery of the synergies between these thinkers and writers is rich and erudite; and his painstaking investigation, in particular, into the elusive Prime-Stevenson’s life and works is pioneering. Bojti’s archival findings are presented engagingly; and his close readings are revelatory. I’ve learned much from Queer Reading Practices and Sexology. This is the work of a marvellous scholar at the top of his game.”
— Tom Ue, FRHistS, Assistant Professor, Cape Breton University, Canada
“This book provides scholars and students with a much-needed critical resource on queer literature and sexology at the end of the nineteenth century. It changes the way we think about queer literature’s contribution to fin-de-siècle sexual science, and vice versa; better yet, its bold interdisciplinary analysis pushes us to rethink the confines of period or national literatures—encouraging us to read canonical and non-canonical texts alongside each other in order to gain a richer sense of the modern invention of homosexuality and the polymath reading practices as embraced by our queer Victorian subjects. Queer Reading Practices and Sexology in Fin-de-Siècle Literature poses a significant contribution to literary studies and queer cultural histories alike.”
— S. Brooke Cameron, Associate Professor, Queen’s University, Canada
“Homosexuality was a neologism coined by a Hungarian, so it is entirely fitting that, at precisely the point it was becoming the word of choice for same-sex attraction, there was a literary fashion for hungarophile/homophile literature. This book gives a lively account of three writers—Wilde, Stenbock, and Prime Stevenson—who deployed Hungarianness as a queer motif on either side of the fin de siècle.”
— Douglas Pretsell, Keele University, UK






