The Single Life: Unpatriarchal Manhoods in English Renaissance Literature
Exploring the Varied Roles of Bachelors during the Renaissance

What if the Renaissance bachelor wasn’t just a social outlier but a literary lens through which early modern masculinity reveals its cracks? In The Single Life: Unpatriarchal Manhoods in English Renaissance Literature, Jordan Windholz examines the overlooked and often subversive roles played by never-married men in shaping gender, sexuality, and social order.

Windholz challenges conventional views on gender and sexuality, identifying five archetypes of bachelorhood that complicate our understanding of patriarchal success: the chaste youth, the journeyman bachelor, the true gallant, the incel scholar, and the unmarried eunuch. These figures don’t conform to ideals of marriage, legacy, or economic productivity, but they also weren’t merely left behind. Instead, they served to define what early modern society valued by embodying what it resisted. Windholz shows how Renaissance texts constructed, contained, and occasionally celebrated these “unpatriarchal manhoods.”

By examining the intersections of sexuality, labor, gentility, emotion, and gender, the book provides a nuanced understanding of how single men both upheld and resisted patriarchal norms. Each chapter offers a detailed analysis of literary texts, blending historical and literary analysis with feminist and queer theory. The first study of its kind, Windholz’s work is essential reading for anyone interested in Renaissance literature, gender studies, or those looking to understand the margins of masculinity and the meanings of singledom—then and now.

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The Single Life: Unpatriarchal Manhoods in English Renaissance Literature
Exploring the Varied Roles of Bachelors during the Renaissance

What if the Renaissance bachelor wasn’t just a social outlier but a literary lens through which early modern masculinity reveals its cracks? In The Single Life: Unpatriarchal Manhoods in English Renaissance Literature, Jordan Windholz examines the overlooked and often subversive roles played by never-married men in shaping gender, sexuality, and social order.

Windholz challenges conventional views on gender and sexuality, identifying five archetypes of bachelorhood that complicate our understanding of patriarchal success: the chaste youth, the journeyman bachelor, the true gallant, the incel scholar, and the unmarried eunuch. These figures don’t conform to ideals of marriage, legacy, or economic productivity, but they also weren’t merely left behind. Instead, they served to define what early modern society valued by embodying what it resisted. Windholz shows how Renaissance texts constructed, contained, and occasionally celebrated these “unpatriarchal manhoods.”

By examining the intersections of sexuality, labor, gentility, emotion, and gender, the book provides a nuanced understanding of how single men both upheld and resisted patriarchal norms. Each chapter offers a detailed analysis of literary texts, blending historical and literary analysis with feminist and queer theory. The first study of its kind, Windholz’s work is essential reading for anyone interested in Renaissance literature, gender studies, or those looking to understand the margins of masculinity and the meanings of singledom—then and now.

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The Single Life: Unpatriarchal Manhoods in English Renaissance Literature

The Single Life: Unpatriarchal Manhoods in English Renaissance Literature

by Jordan Windholz
The Single Life: Unpatriarchal Manhoods in English Renaissance Literature

The Single Life: Unpatriarchal Manhoods in English Renaissance Literature

by Jordan Windholz

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$34.95 
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Overview

Exploring the Varied Roles of Bachelors during the Renaissance

What if the Renaissance bachelor wasn’t just a social outlier but a literary lens through which early modern masculinity reveals its cracks? In The Single Life: Unpatriarchal Manhoods in English Renaissance Literature, Jordan Windholz examines the overlooked and often subversive roles played by never-married men in shaping gender, sexuality, and social order.

Windholz challenges conventional views on gender and sexuality, identifying five archetypes of bachelorhood that complicate our understanding of patriarchal success: the chaste youth, the journeyman bachelor, the true gallant, the incel scholar, and the unmarried eunuch. These figures don’t conform to ideals of marriage, legacy, or economic productivity, but they also weren’t merely left behind. Instead, they served to define what early modern society valued by embodying what it resisted. Windholz shows how Renaissance texts constructed, contained, and occasionally celebrated these “unpatriarchal manhoods.”

By examining the intersections of sexuality, labor, gentility, emotion, and gender, the book provides a nuanced understanding of how single men both upheld and resisted patriarchal norms. Each chapter offers a detailed analysis of literary texts, blending historical and literary analysis with feminist and queer theory. The first study of its kind, Windholz’s work is essential reading for anyone interested in Renaissance literature, gender studies, or those looking to understand the margins of masculinity and the meanings of singledom—then and now.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780817362133
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Publication date: 07/15/2025
Series: Strode Studies in Early Modern Literature and Culture
Pages: 300
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

JORDAN WINDHOLZ is associate professor of English at Shippensburg University. His scholarship has appeared in Shakespeare Studies, Modern Philology, and English Literary Renaissance.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: The Single Life in English Renaissance Literature and Culture

Chapter 1. The Single Life of the Chaste Youth: Early Modern Asexuality and the Naturalization of Desire in All’s Well That Ends Well

Chapter 2. The Single Life of the Journeyman Bachelor: Paronomasia and Communities of Labor Outside (and Inside) Much Ado About Nothing

Chapter 3. The Single Life of the True Gallant: Economic Men and Entrepreneurial Action in Epicene and Wit at Severall Weapons

Chapter 4. The Single Life of the Incel Scholar: Feelings of Entitlement in Hamlet and The Anatomy of Melancholy

Chapter 5. The Single Life of the Unmarried Eunuch: Elaborations of Gendered Embodiment in Mikrokosmographia, Twelfth Night, and The Roaring Girl

Epilogue: The Renaissance of the Single Life in the Amatonormative Renaissance

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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