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Angels in America Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Allen J. Frantzen

This literature criticism consists of approximately 50 pages of analysis & critique of Angels in America.
This section contains 14,935 words
(approx. 50 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Tony Kushner - Critical Essay by Allen J. Frantzen

Critical Essay by Allen J. Frantzen

SOURCE: Frantzen, Allen J. “Alla, Angli, and Angels.” In Before the Closet: Same-Sex Love from “Beowulf” to “Angels in America,” pp. 264-92. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998.

In the following essay, Frantzen examines the representation of Anglo-Saxon identity in Angels in America in terms of Kushner's sexual identity politics.

Rome, not Northumbria, is the center of The Man of Law's Tale, and celibacy, not marital bliss, is the Man of Law's preferred mode for Christ's holy ministers. Chaucer's text looks neither to the vernacular tradition of married clergy that the Wycliffites sought nor to the celibate clerical world demanded by Roman canon law and espoused earlier by the Anglo-Saxon church of Ælfric and by Norman reformers. Instead, the Man of Law's heroine is a product of Chaucerian compromise. She practices what might be thought of as serial chastity. Custance marries Alla, but after she becomes pregnant she lives without...
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This section contains 14,935 words
(approx. 50 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Tony Kushner - Critical Essay by Allen J. Frantzen
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Tony Kushner - Critical Essay by Allen J. Frantzen from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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