Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Mehl Penrose

headshot spap mpenrose

Associate Professor, Spanish and Portuguese
Associate Professor, School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures
Affiliate Associate Professor, Classics
Affiliate Faculty, Latin American and Caribbean Studies Center

(301) 405-0142

3123 Jiménez Hall
Get Directions

Education

Ph.D., Hispanic Languages and Literatures, University of California, Los Angeles

Research Expertise

Gender and Sexuality Studies
LGBTQ Studies
Literary Studies
Modern and Contemporary
Queer Theory

Mehl Penrose holds a doctorate in Hispanic Languages and Literatures from UCLA. His research focuses primarily on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century cultural and literary studies of Spain. He also studies and writes about non-normative discursive representations of masculine gender expression and male sexualities; the intersections of legal, medical, journalistic, and literary discourses; French and German cultural, philosophical, and political influences on modern Spanish thought; and queer theory as it relates to modern and contemporary Spain. His monograph, Masculinity and Queer Desire in Spanish Enlightenment Literature (Ashgate 2014), examines the non-normative male figure in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Spanish cultural discourse. His latest publications include “The Society of San Guiñolé: Pederasty and Prostitution in La chula by Francisco de Sales Mayo.” Hispania, vol. 105, no. 4, 2022, pp. 539-54; “Found in Translation: Homoerotica and Unconventional Muslim Masculinities in Gaspar María de Nava Álvarez’s Poesías asiáticas.” The Routledge Companion to the Hispanic Enlightenment, edited by Elizabeth Franklin Lewis et al., Routledge, 2020, pp. 342-54; and "Performing the Closet in Clarín's La Regenta," Decimonónica vol. 15, no.1 (Winter 2018), pp. 32-49. He has published articles in such refereed journals as Decimonónica, Dieciocho, Revista Hispánica Moderna, and Romance Quarterly. His current book project examines the origins of the medical and psychiatric image of the queer "invert" subject in nineteenth-century Spanish medical treatises and hygiene and sexology manuals and their influence on the development of Realist-Naturalist prose fiction in Spain. He received support for the project in the form of a UMD Research and Scholarship Award for Fall 2014 and a UMD sabbatical in Spring 2015.

Dr. Penrose teaches upper-division undergraduate courses in Spanish culture, history, and literature of all periods. He also teaches graduate seminars on Spanish Romanticism; gender, sexuality, class, and nationality in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Spanish literature; gender and sexuality in German, French, and Spanish literature of the Enlightenment; and the Realist and Naturalist novel in Spain. He is currently a member of the Modern Language Association, the International Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, and the Ibero-American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies.

Publications

Found in Translation: Homoerotica and Unconventional Muslim Masculinities in Gaspar María de Nava Álvarez’s 'Poesías asiáticas'

In his translation of Mideastern poetry, Gaspar de Nava Álvarez constructs new notions of Muslim men's masculinities and sexualities, deploys Islamicate discursive imagery as a new Arcadia in the Spanish imaginary, and rejects French poetic influences.

School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures

Author/Lead: Mehl Penrose
Dates: -

The Spanish Enlightenment writer Gaspar de Nava Álvarez interrogated eighteenth-century notions of masculinities and sexualities in 'Poesías asiáticas' (Asian Poems 1833), a reworking of original Arabic and Persian verses. I argue that the homoeroticism expressed in 'Poesías asiáticas' forges an Enlightenment-inspired masculine identity of Muslim men that deconstructs stereotypical images of lascivious and violent Islamic predators. The deployment of positive imagery of desire between Muslim men redirects Spanish Enlightenment poetry away from French influences and invokes Islamicate discursive images as a sort of new Arcadia in the Spanish collective imaginary and as a source of poetic inspiration.

Masculinity and Queer Desire in Spanish Enlightenment Literature

This monograph analyzes journalistic essays, poetry, and drama in order to show that Spanish authors employed satirical images of unconventional men to shape the national dialog on gender and sexuality.

School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures

Author/Lead: Mehl Penrose
Dates: -

This book is the first monograph wholly devoted to the subject of non-normative masculine gender and male sexuality in Enlightenment Spain. It analyzes journalistic essays, poetry, and drama in order to show that Spanish authors employed satirical images of unconventional men to shape the national dialog on gender and sexuality. The first half of the book is devoted to studying the gendered and sexual problematic of the "petimetre," an effeminate, Francophile male stock character who figured a failed masculinity, a dubious sexuality, and an invasive French cultural presence in Spain. The study counters traditional scholarship on this figure, which has argued that the "petimetre" was a trope configured to assuage anxieties resulting only from gender-related issues, by positing that the character was also created to address concerns about sexuality. The second half of the book examines same-sex male desire, love, and erotica and argues that the "bujarrón," a man who had sexual relations with men, was normally portrayed in cultural discourse as a foreigner or clergyman as a tactical maneuver designed to heighten xenophobia and undermine Church power. The second part also re-evaluates the scholarly position on male relationships in pastoral poetry, maintaining that rather than depicting just friendships, some of the poetry evinced homoerotic desire and imitated Virgilian verse in style and theme. This study argues that it is within the Enlightenment rather than the post-Enlightenment period that modern day notions of masculine gender and sexuality were embedded into the fabric of Spanish society.

Petimetres as a Third Sex in José Clavijo y Fajardo’s "El pensador matritense"

This article interrogates the "petimetre" trope that José Clavijo y Fajardo develops in his essay collection, 'El Pensador Matritense,' arguing that it serves as a warning about the corrupting influence of effeminate men on the patriarchal order.

School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures

Author/Lead: Mehl Penrose
Dates: -

This book is the first monograph wholly devoted to the subject of non-normative masculine gender and male sexuality in Enlightenment Spain. It analyzes journalistic essays, poetry, and drama in order to show that Spanish authors employed satirical images of unconventional men to shape the national dialog on gender and sexuality. The first half of the book is devoted to studying the gendered and sexual problematic of the "petimetre," an effeminate, Francophile male stock character who figured a failed masculinity, a dubious sexuality, and an invasive French cultural presence in Spain. The study counters traditional scholarship on this figure, which has argued that the "petimetre" was a trope configured to assuage anxieties resulting only from gender-related issues, by positing that the character was also created to address concerns about sexuality. The second half of the book examines same-sex male desire, love, and erotica and argues that the "bujarrón," a man who had sexual relations with men, was normally portrayed in cultural discourse as a foreigner or clergyman as a tactical maneuver designed to heighten xenophobia and undermine Church power. The second part also re-evaluates the scholarly position on male relationships in pastoral poetry, maintaining that rather than depicting just friendships, some of the poetry evinced homoerotic desire and imitated Virgilian verse in style and theme. This study argues that it is within the Enlightenment rather than the post-Enlightenment period that modern day notions of masculine gender and sexuality were embedded into the fabric of Spanish society.

The Imaginary Hermaphrodite as Concretized Intergender in Juan Antonio Mercadal’s 'Discurso IX'

This article examines Juan Antonio Mercadal's essay “Discurso Nueve,” in which he describes a type of man whom he refers to as “hermaphrodita,” a queer male figure who transgresses the dimorphous gendered system.

School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures

Author/Lead: Mehl Penrose
Dates: -

In late eighteenth-century Spanish discourse, moralists and satirists attempted to redress what they deemed a grave social issue: the loss of a masculine, virtuous visibility in men, especially in young, well-heeled males. In moralist essays, the petimetre became the quintessential trope for the idle, effeminate, aristocratic Spanish man. He was created as a literary figure to stand in marked contrast to the manly hombre de bien, who represented martial valor and heteronormative privacy. Juan Antonio Mercadal, author of El Duende Especulativo sobre la vida civil (1761), delved into the fray with, among other writings, his “Discurso Nueve.” In this essay, he names and describes a type of man whom he refers to as “hermaphrodita.” Like the petimetre, he is a queer male figure who transgresses the dimorphous gendered system. By employing the term “hermaphrodite,” Mercadal conjures up images of an intersex person who retained a monstrous, almost mythical reputation in the eighteenth century. This works to configure in the mind of the reading public a man whose sexuality is abhorrent in an era of hardening heteronormative sexual roles. Mercadal’s “hermaphrodita” has the look, the walk, and the talk of a woman but still seems to be of the male sex, according to Mercadal. In effect, the satirist is employing a coded word to invent a new reality: an intergendered male who challenges what it means to be a man or a woman. By utilizing a new term to identify and describe a male who is deemed problematic along gender and sexual lines, Mercadal delineates the narrowed parameters of what constitutes a “real” Spanish man. The unintended result of Mercadal’s essay is the creation of a new identity that brings together “ser” and “aparecer,” or reality and illusion. By creating the figure of the “hermaphrodita,” Mercadal engendered the very reality he wished to combat.