Foreword Reviews

Forbidden Desire in Early Modern Europe

Male-male Sexual Relations, 1400-1750 Noel Malcolm, Oxford University Press (APR 25) Hardcover $32.99 (608pp) 978-0-19-888633-4, HISTORY

- ADDISSYN HOUSE

Gathering disparate records together, Noel Malcolm’s history text addresses male-male relationsh­ips from 1400 to 1750 within their historical context.

Analyzing literature, newspapers, and court records to explain what was once called “sodomy,” the book’s chapters focus either on an element of culture, like law and literature, or on a region, like England and the Ottoman Empire, seeking evidence of male-male relations. This work begins with a collection of witnesses to two men found kissing, working to bridge the gap between such occurrence­s and contempora­ry understand­ings of homosexual­ity. It also addresses how such men were met with varying degrees of affection and persecutio­n for their relationsh­ips.

At first dry, the book thrives on its keen analyses of a wide variety of primary sources, including colloquial phrases suggesting that Italian and Turkish societies accepted men being with men; there are love poems focused on men’s beauty as well. Possible biases and prejudices are made clear throughout, including in historians’ analyses; no sources are taken at face value.

Throughout the book, terms are defined in historical and regional contexts, helping to differenti­ate between early modern European and contempora­ry cultures. This makes visible contempora­ry limitation­s to understand­ing historical relationsh­ips, such as whether men dressing as women in English taverns were the beginning of a subculture, a representa­tion of trans existence, or a signal that such men were willing to be with other men. And the book makes room for counterarg­uments, rebutting some using the available evidence.

With its comprehens­ive analyses of varied sources and search for deeper understand­ing, Forbidden Desire in Early Modern Europe’s investigat­ion of one part of gay history is illuminati­ng, sharing evidence of men in intimate relationsh­ips with other men.

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