Dangerous Men and Adventurous Women: Romance Writers on the Appeal of the Romance

Front Cover
Jayne Ann Krentz
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1992 - Literary Criticism - 186 pages

In Dangerous Men and Adventurous Women, Jayne Ann Krentz and the contributors to this volume—all best-selling romance writers—explode myths and biases that haunt both the writers and readers of romances.

In this seamless, ultimately fascinating, and controversial book, the authors dispute some of the notions that plague their profession, including the time-worn theory that the romance genre contains only one single, monolithic story, which is cranked out over and over again. The authors discuss positive life-affirming values inherent in all romances: the celebration of female power, courage, intelligence, and gentleness; the inversion of the power structure of a patriarchal society; and the integration of male and female. Several of the essays also discuss the issue of reader identification with the characters, a relationship that is far more complex than most critics realize.

From inside the book

Contents

Facts and Figures
11
The Romance and the Empowerment of Women
53
Sweet Subversions
61
viii
73
Welcome to the Dark Side
99
Virginity in the Romance
121
Women
133
Moments of Power
141
The Risk of Seduction
145
The Ending as Beginning
151
Judge Me by the Joy I Bring
159
Bibliography
181
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1992)

Jayne Ann Krentz (Amanda Quick, Jayne Castle, Stephanie James) has written and published more than fifty series romances for several publishers including Harlequin, Silhouette, and Dell. Currently she writes contemporary romances for Pocket Books under her own name and historical romances for Bantam under the pen name Amanda Quick. Several of her contemporary and historical titles, including Scandal, Rendezvous, Sweet Fortune, and Perfect Partners, appeared on the New York Times bestseller list.