Sexuality and Gender in Early Modern Europe: Institutions, Texts, ImagesJames Turner Cambridge University Press, 1993 M08 5 - 345 páginas This exploration of sexuality and gender in Renaissance art and literature starts from an assumption that would have seemed unthinkable a generation ago: that the 'natural' phenomena of sex, gender and subjectivity are constructed rather than essentially biological or fixed. The essays rise to the challenge of producing a new post-Foucaultian history of gender and sexuality. All of them have been influenced by feminism, and several deal with women not just as objects of representation, but as subjects and authors in their own right. Among the historical issues examined are the production and suppression of women's voices, the relation between illicit sexuality and social order, the ambiguity of beauty, lesbian erotics, birth-imagery and the birthing ritual, the class status of women, the 'femininity' of masculine dress, and the sexual politics of courtesy. |
Contenido
Marriage love sex and Renaissance civic morality | 10 |
Typology sexuality and the Renaissance Esther | 31 |
Artifice as seduction in Titian | 55 |
Renaissance women and the question of class | 90 |
Venetian women writers and their discontents | 107 |
The ambiguity of beauty in Tasso and Petrarch | 133 |
The ladies man and the age of Elizabeth | 158 |
Troping Utopia Donnes brief for lesbianism | 182 |
Staging gender William Shakespeare and Elizabeth Gary | 208 |
The semiotics of masculinity in Renaissance England | 233 |
Recuperating women and the man behind the screen | 247 |
A womb of his own male Renaissance poets in the female body | 266 |
The geography of love in seventeenthcentury womens fiction | 289 |
Gender and conduct in Paradise Lost | 310 |
339 | |
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Sexuality and Gender in Early Modern Europe: Institutions, Texts, Images James Grantham Turner Sin vista previa disponible - 1993 |
Términos y frases comunes
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