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Strange intercessions
contraventions of the muse in the writings of B. S. Johnson
pp. 104-116
Abstract
Henry was not a puritan of the kind who regards sexual pleasure as ‘sinful’; but indiscriminate copulation seemed to him to be so shallow, so meaningless, so transitory, and so to offend against the best of which humankind was capable, that his attitude towards it was similar to that of a puritan of extreme convictions.
Publication details
Published in:
Tew Philip, White Glyn (2007) Re-reading B. S. Johnson. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 104-116
Full citation:
Barrett Gerard (2007) „Strange intercessions: contraventions of the muse in the writings of B. S. Johnson“, In: P. Tew & G. White (eds.), Re-reading B. S. Johnson, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 104–116.