‘Textual Masculinity elegantly weaves together social class and language, and cultures of manuscript exchange and print, academies and libertinism, in the late Venetian Renaissance.’
Holly S. Hurlburt, Renaissance and Reformation, vol 39:02:2016
‘Quintances’ translations are lively and effective… We have much to learn from the material she analyzes.’
Mary Gallucci, Renaissance Quarterly vol 69:04:2016
‘Textual Masculinity is an important work providing innovative, more sophisticated, and broader understanding of the production of literature on women in sixteenth-century Venice. It will have to be taken into account in any future study the Renaissance Venetian literary world.’
Paula C. Clarke, Journal of Modern History vol 89:02:2017
‘Textual Masculinities is full of new information, even about well-known subjects like Stampa and Franco… It includes a wealth of Venetian poetry that she has translated and published for the first time.’
Deanna Shemek, Early Modern Women Journal vol 12:01:2017
‘This book is a major contribution to the field of early modern gender studies and a groundbreaking text that brilliantly approaches the understudies issues related to masculine identity.’
Chiara Girardi, Gender/Sexuality/Italy vol 4:2017
“Textual Masculinity and the Exchange of Women in Renaissance Venice is a powerful and exciting book. A thought-provoking study of the homosocial circuits and writing in which ferocious misogyny and murderous contempt bonded men against women, Courtney Quaintance’s work is lucid and approachable. Her expertise in Venetian dialect makes this study stand out in work on sixteenth-century Italian poetry, as does her painstaking archival work on manuscript writings and biographical data identifying the writers she analyses.”
Ann Rosalind Jones, Esther Cloudman Dunn Professor Emerita of Comparative Literature, Smith College
“Courtney Quaintance’s book will change the way scholars think of early modern pornographic literature. Her broad and meticulous research shows that these texts were not merely dalliances that circulated in dark corners. They were integral to the formation of important networks of men, and informed the public literary endeavours of these individuals.”
Gerry Milligan, Department of World Languages and Literatures, College of Staten Island, City University of New York