“That’s when he comes rushing into her life.”
Swedish Literary Depictions of Human-Animal Sexual Contact at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.52537/humanimalia.9434Abstract
This essay discusses three literary narratives written by Swedish authors Elsie Johansson (1984), Gabriella Håkansson (2003) and Lars Jakobson (2004), which all depict human-animal sexual contact. The analysis shows that two of these representations are written in the intersection of a bestiality paradigm and a pet paradigm, thus depicting sexual contact between human and animal as ultimately lethal, although instigated by love. The third narrative sketches another world in which human-animal sexual and romantic relationships are part of everyday life; ultimately, however, this comes across as an unsatisfying solution for both parties. The outcome of the investigation is the proposal that, during the course of the twentieth century, a rural, communicative, male sodomy paradigm seems to have given way to one of urban, silent, female sexuality.
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Copyright (c) 2020 Ann-Sofie Lönngren
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