Resourcefully adapting insights from recent queer theorists, Jones shifts the conversation on a queer Poe from sexuality to temporality, creating fresh, provocative perspectives on some of Poe’s most influential works. Jones exposes problematic heteronormative assumptions that have persistently structured Poe’s reception, with broader implications for how we read other nineteenth-century American authors.
--Carl Ostrowski, Professor of English at Middle Tennessee State University and editor of Collected Tales, Poems, and Other Writings of Edgar Allan Poe (Bloomsbury 2021)
Jones establishes, definitively, the validity of considering Poe as a queer author. Indeed, future studies will have to make a strong case about why we should not read Poe as queer. This galvanizing book is most welcome.--David Greven, Professor of English at the University of South Carolina and author of Gender Protest and Same-Sex Desire in Antebellum American Literature
This book builds upon recent theoretical approaches that define queerness as more of a temporal orientation than a sexual one to explore how Edgar Allan Poe's literary works were frequently invested in imagining lives that contemporary readers can understand as queer, as they stray outside of or aggressively reject normative life paths, including heterosexual romance, marriage, and reproduction, and emphasize individuals' present desires over future plans. The book's analysis of many of Poe's best-known works, including "The Raven," "The Fall of the House of Usher," "The Black Cat," "The Masque of the Red Death," and "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," show that his attraction to the liberation of queerness is accompanied by demonstrations of extreme anxiety about the potentially terrifying consequences of non-normative choices. While Poe never resolved the conflicts in his thinking, this book argues that this compelling imaginative tension between queerness and temporal normativity is crucial to understanding his canon.
Paul Christian Jones is Professor of English at Ohio University, USA, and the author of two books, Unwelcome Voices: Subversive Fiction in the Antebellum South (2005) and Against the Gallows: Antebellum American Writers and the Movement to Abolish Capital Punishment (2011).
Paul Christian Jones
Gender and Sexuality Short Story Queer Studies Gothic Fiction queer theory same-sex desire queer temporality reproductive futurism homosexuality psychoanalysis AIDS feminist theory critical race theory
"Resourcefully adapting insights from recent queer theorists, Paul Christian Jones in Poe, Queerness, and the End of Time shifts the conversation on a queer Poe from sexuality to temporality, creating fresh, provocative perspectives on some of Poe’s most influential works. Jones exposes problematic heteronormative assumptions that have persistently structured Poe’s reception, with broader implications for how we read other nineteenth-century American authors."
--Carl Ostrowski, Professor of English at Middle Tennessee State University and editor of Collected Tales, Poems, and Other Writings of Edgar Allan Poe (2021)
“Jones offers original and always useful contributions throughout this book. He establishes, definitively, the validity of considering Poe as a queer author. Indeed, future studies will have to make a strong case about why we should not read Poe as queer. Jones convincingly argues that Poe’s work reflects queer temporality, given its frequent depiction of characters who do not conform to rigid temporal standards. This galvanizing book is most welcome.”
--David Greven, Professor of English at the University of South Carolina and author of Gender Protest and Same-Sex Desire in Antebellum American Literature (2014)"Focusing brilliantly on Poe’s exploration of alternative concepts of time, Paul Jones shows Poe exploring other forms of deviance and non-normative behavior—queer conceptions of time and life management, refusals to adapt to normative progressive expectations, such as marriage and child production. Grounding this study in the rich history of queer scholarship, Jones offers smart, fresh readings of Poe’s best-known stories."
--Leland Person, Professor of English at the University of Cincinnati and author of Aesthetic Headaches: Women and a Masculine Poetics in Poe, Melville, and Hawthorne (1988)