Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter One:
Rape and the Rehabilitation of Royalist Identity, 1660-65
Political Propaganda in the 1640s: The Trope of the Debauched Cavalier
Redeeming the Cavaliers: Orrery's The Generall Porter, Howard, and the Trope of the Debauched Usurper
Howard's The Usurper and the Trope of the Poisonous Catholic Bride
Conclusion
Chapter Two:
Rape and the Roots of Discontent, 1666-77
Dryden's Amboyna and the Trope of the Demonic Dutchman
Male Libertinism and the Poisonous Catholic Mistress: 1670s Propaganda
Male Abdication, Female Poison: Settle's Love and Revenge
The Debauched Libertine and the Failure of Female Revenge: Shadwell'sThe Libertine
Conclusion: Aphra Behn's The Rover, Part I, and Political Ambivalence on the Eve of the Popish Plot
Chapter Three:
Lucrece Narratives: Rochester, Lee, and the Ethics of Regicide
Rochester's Valentinian and the Limits of Monarchical Authority
Lee's Lucius Junius Brutus and the Dangers of Revolt
Conclusion
Chapter Four:
Rape and the Cannibal Father, 1678-87
The Exclusion Crisis and the Politics of Familial Collapse
Staging Intrafamilial Conflict: Otway and Lee Crowne's Thyestes and the Horrors of the Cannibal Father
Defending Absolute Monarchy: Ravenscroft's Titus Andronicus
Conclusion
Chapter Five:
Rape in the Aftermath of Revolution: Images of Male Rape, 1688-99
Warring Words: Propaganda in the 1690s
Articulating Jacobite Sympathies: Settle's Distress'd Innocence
Defending the Revolution: Variations on the Trope of Male Rape
Conclusion
About the Author
Notes
Works Cited
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