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The Promiscuity of Print: John Clare’s ‘Don Juan’ and the Culture of Romantic Celebrity

Abstract

This essay offers a new reading of John Clare\u27s Don Juan, a hard-hitting and deliberately vulgar denunciation of English society and letters. In his extended Byronic performance, Clare harnesses Byron\u27s famed sexual appetite and strong Romantic irony to dramatic effect, defiantly redeploying the machinery of literary celebrity that had produced him as The Northamptonshire Peasant Poet. Tracing Clare\u27s imaginative and textual investments in prostitutes and boxers, figures located at the margins of London\u27s criminal underworld, I show how the compulsive misogyny of Don Juan and its obscene sexual punning form part of a concerted, if not entirely coherent, response to a culture increasingly organized by the spectacle of celebrity

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