TY - JOUR AU - Peter David Mathews DA - 2017/07 PY - 2017 UR - https://academic.oup.com/english/article-abstract/66/253/166/3858272?redirectedFrom=fulltext UR - https://repository.hanyang.ac.kr/handle/20.500.11754/114983 AB - While Will Self's Cock and Bull has rightly been seen as a satirical critique of gender and sexuality, this article argues that critics have tended to overlook the intertwining critique of power that accompanies such themes. Placing Cock and Bull within the larger context of Self's subsequent writings and intellectual influences, this essay examines how these two early novellas self-consciously borrow from and engage with the tradition of British satire, which has long been concerned with questions of gender, sexuality, and power. PB - OXFORD UNIV PRESS TI - Gender, Power, and Satire in Will Self's Cock and Bull IS - 253 VL - 66 DO - 10.1093/english/efx014 T2 - ENGLISH ER -