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250 Queer Masculinities, 1550–1800<br />

16 Louise Fradenburg and Carla Freccero, ed. Premodern Sexualities (New York<br />

and London: Routledge, 1996) xviii.<br />

17 Claude J. Summers, rev. of Sodometries, by Jonathan Goldberg, Journal of<br />

Homosexuality 29.1 (1995): 119–23.<br />

18 Mario DiGangi, ‘Marlowe, Queer Studies and Renaissance Homoeroticism’,<br />

Marlowe, History, and Sexuality: New Critical Essays on Christopher Marlowe,<br />

ed. Paul Whitfield White (New York: AMS P, 1998) 196–7.<br />

19 Ian McAdam, The Irony of Identity: Self and Imagination in the Drama of<br />

Christopher Marlowe (Newark: U of Delaware P and London: Associated UP,<br />

1999) 202.<br />

20 Alan Bray, ‘Epilogue’, Betteridge 165.<br />

21 Thomas Coryate, Coryats Crudities (London: by W.S., 1611) Ff7 v –8 r .<br />

22 Coryate Ff8 r .<br />

23 Carrier E4 v .<br />

24 Alan Stewart, Close Readers: Humanism and Sodomy in Early Modern England<br />

(Princeton: Princeton UP, 1997) xlv.<br />

25 Stewart, Close Readers 149.<br />

26 Stephen Guy-Bray, Homoerotic Space: The Politics of Loss in Renaissance<br />

Literature (Toronto, Buffalo, London: University of Toronto Press, 2002) 5.<br />

27 Anon., A new and large discourse of the Trauels of Sir Anthony Sherley Knight,<br />

by Sea, and ouer Land, to the Persian Empire (London: by Valentine Simmes<br />

for Felix Norton, 1601) C1 r .<br />

28 Barnabe Barnes, The Devil’s Charter, ed. Nick de Somogyi (New York: Globe<br />

Education and Theatre Arts Books/Routledge, 1999).<br />

29 Cameron McFarlane, The Sodomite in Fiction and Satire, 1660–1750 (New<br />

York: Columbia UP, 1997) 27.<br />

30 Stewart, Close Readers 3.<br />

31 Stewart, Close Readers xlv.<br />

32 Bruce Smith ‘Premodern Sexualities’, PMLA 115: 3 (2000): 318–29.<br />

33 Cynthia B. Herrup, A House in Gross Disorder: Sex, Law, and the 2 nd Earl of<br />

Castlehaven (New York and Oxford: Oxford UP, 1999) 2.<br />

34 Herrup 58.<br />

35 My take on Castlehaven’s trial for a ‘crime’ that signifies political and social<br />

disorder contrasts Nicholas F. Radel’s reading of the same case as being<br />

about ‘the discursive production of certain kinds of same-sex desire and proscriptions<br />

that surround them’ (myitalics). See Nicholas F. Radel, ‘Can the<br />

Sodomite Speak? Sodomy, Satire, Desire, and the Castlehaven Case’, Love,<br />

Sex, Intimacy and Friendship Between Men, ed. O’Donnell and O’Rourke, 151.<br />

36 Thomas Beard, The Theatre of Gods Iudgements. Tr. ovt of French, and argumented<br />

by more than three hundred Examples (London: Adam Islip, 1597) S7 v .<br />

37 Andrew Hadfield, The English Renaissance, 1500–1620 (Oxford: Blackwell,<br />

2001) 255.<br />

38 Richard Halpern, Shakespeare’s Perfume: Sodomy and Sublimity in the Sonnets,<br />

Wilde, Freud, and Lacan (Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 2002) 5.<br />

39 R. A. Rebholz, ed. Sir Thomas Wyatt, The Complete Poems (Harmondsworth:<br />

Penguin, 1978) 11.<br />

40 Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Between Men: English Literature and Male Homosocial<br />

Desire (New York: Columbia UP, 1985).

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