Sex with Shakespeare: Here's Much to Do with Pain, but More with Love
Don’t be fooled by the title. This memoir is about the very specific fetish of spanking, around which Keenan’s sexual identity revolves, and her attempts to understand and embrace it. Still, there is some Shakespeare. First infatuated in high school with Caliban from The Tempest, Keenan devoted much study to the Bard and examines her fetish through the lens of his plays. She has a disarming way of imagining Shakespearean characters as figures she can turn to in a crisis, which pays tribute to the ways people create personal meaning for themselves through literature. And she has many opinions to offer on how sex and sexuality are portrayed by Shakespeare. But this is still a long way from literary criticism; it’s an explicit and often harrowing account of her out-of-the-norm sexuality. Keenan writes, she says, so others like her will not have to feel alone. By demonstrating the elasticity with which sexual undertones in Shakespeare can be read, she makes a case for a more expansive definition of sexual identity than society typically offers.