Abstract

GLADFELDER, HAL. Fanny Hill in Bombay: The Making and Unmaking of John Cleland. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012. 311 pp. $54.95. Hal Gladfelder's deeply researched and thoughtfully assembled biography of John Cleland makes good on its promise reopen [his] writing in all its messiness of being written (4). Cleland here is an eccentric figure who strategically navigated eighteenth-century print culture and politics. Gladfelder's exhaustive work with primary documents provides a welcome supplement to William Epstein's 1974 biography, which dealt sketchily with Cleland's career beyond Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure. Gladfelder does devote substantial time in the third and fourth chapters to this most famous of Cleland's works. The first of these situates the novel within the discourse on sodomy, suggesting Cleland and his contemporary Thomas Cannon, author of Ancient and Modern Pederasty Investigated and Exemplify'd, explored the category not to vilify same-sex intercourse but to portray erotic desire as a range of non-normative sexual behaviors. (Cannon's pamphlet is extant only in legal transcriptions, and Gladfelder's ample quotations provide unprecedented access to this lost work.) In these writings, eros turns the body topsy-turvy, and desire and its objects are distanced from restrictive moralistic and heteronormative paradigms (77). Gladfelder's reading of Cleland's sodomy scene, which has received so much critical attention, is the most persuasive and textually attentive treatment I've encountered, acknowledging echoes of anti-sodomy stances but showing ultimately that its continuities with heterosexual scenes challenge eighteenth-century distinctions between natural and unnatural desire. The fourth chapter argues that Cleland's prose fiction. Woman of Pleasure in particular, unseats familiar conventions of the early English novel in favor of experimenting with new instructive modes: repetition and folly. In sum, Gladfelder provides a thick and comprehensive account of Woman of Pleasure, parsing its internal sexual deliberations with as much care as its engagement with literary culture more broadly. But perhaps most importantly, this book examines Cleland's entire career, from his first Bombay clerical writings to his late linguistic and political tracts. Rather than try to account for the sources and works covered--Gladfelder's research in this regard is exhaustive--I'll offer here what I found to be the most transformative revelations. First, Gladfelder's work with Cleland's correspondence brings to life an articulate, bold, erratic, even volatile personality. Advocacy for Indian citizens in 1730s Bombay, humble self-defense following Woman of Pleasure's publication, desperate applications to his mother for an early inheritance--his various legal negotiations show him to be alternately persuasive, self-pitying, and ferocious. …

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