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Sharon Block and Kathleen M. Brown | Clio in Search of Eros: Redefining Sexualities in Early America | The William and Mary Quarterly, 60.1 | The History Cooperative
60.1  
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April, 2002
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Clio in Search of Eros: Redefining Sexualities in Early America

Sharon Block and Kathleen M. Brown



     THE William and Mary Quarterly used to boast a Trivia section devoted to humorous archival anecdotes sent in by its readers. Tidbits about a wide range of human foibles were printed under headings that connected them to modern concerns. Sexual tales constituted a small but noteworthy portion of Trivia, joining anecdotes about excessive alcohol consumption, political corruption, and the curse of lawyers. "NEVER LET A WOMAN IN YOUR LIFE" included archival material on a "lady of delicate dress" who encouraged a drunken "young coxcomb" admiring her from behind to "kiss the part you like best," a "bachanalian" festival of "white and red men and women without distinction" who danced and made "sacrifices to Venus," and information about a cross-dressing "LADY in Man's breeches." Two decades later, an entry on "CAPITAL PUNISHMENT" told of a raped woman who selected "the SEVEREST punishment" for the man who had raped her: marriage. 1 1
     In the era of postmodern and feminist scholarship, we might deride these submissions as undertheorized and misogynist. But they had a clear theoretical foundation, grounded in the premise that there is humor to be found in human beings' eternal efforts to scratch the sexual itch. That itch was never the subject of historical inquiry; rather, it was presumed to be unchanging and collectively understood, today as well as 300 years ago. This is precisely why the sexual material—indeed, nearly all material—in Trivia was supposed to be funny: modern readers would be titillated by evidence of a familiar itch being scratched in frank, publicly visible, or deviant ways by the otherwise foreign people of the past. Contributions to Trivia rarely included scholarly treatment—the anecdotes were believed to speak for themselves. "Nudge, nudge, wink, wink" seemed to be the desired conclusion, and more often than not, the laughs were garnered at women's expense. 2
     The Quarterly's sanction of public laughter about sex ended in the wake of the feminist movement, the rise of cultural history, and the emergence of the history of sexuality as a dynamic field of inquiry. By historicizing matters once understood as universal and eternal, scholars of sexuality have connected sexual behaviors and desires to specific political, social, and economic contexts. Many have discovered links between this seemingly private realm of human experience and broader structures of power. Still others doubt the coherence of the category of sexuality itself, raising new questions about how scholars in the modern era can even begin to understand the complex relationships that contributed to the meanings and expressions of sexuality in the early American past. 3

     This topical issue grows out of this new interest in the history of sexuality. It also reflects our interest in having early American scholars participate in defining this new field. When we decided on a conference and circulated the call for papers, we encouraged studies that investigated the historically contingent meanings of desire, pleasure, and physical intimacy; the impact of colonial ambitions, racial hierarchies, and gender relations; the erotic and the romantic; popular mores, etiquette, and legal regulations; and folk and scientific theories of reproduction. It is gratifying to see how this collection touches on so many of the themes that we initially hoped the conference would explore.

 

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