Subject and Object in Renaissance CultureMargreta de Grazia, Maureen Quilligan, Peter Stallybrass This collection of original essays brings together some of the most prominent figures in new historicist and cultural materialist approaches to the early modern period, and offers a new focus on the literature and culture of the Renaissance. Traditionally, Renaissance studies have concentrated on the human subject. The essays collected here bring objects - purses, clothes, tapestries, houses, maps, feathers, communion wafers, tools, pages, skulls - back into view. As a result, the much-vaunted early modern subject ceases to look autonomous and sovereign, but is instead caught up in a vast and uneven world of objects which he and she makes, owns, values, imagines, and represents. This book puts things back into relation with people; in the process, it elicits new critical readings, and new cultural configurations. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 77
Page xiii
... Female Literacies and Emergent Empires : Studies in English and French Cultural History , 1400-1688 . Marjorie Garber is William R. Kenan , Jr. Professor of English and Director of the Center for Literary and Cultural Studies at Harvard ...
... Female Literacies and Emergent Empires : Studies in English and French Cultural History , 1400-1688 . Marjorie Garber is William R. Kenan , Jr. Professor of English and Director of the Center for Literary and Cultural Studies at Harvard ...
Page xv
... Female Authority : Christine de Pizan's " Cité des Dames " ( 1991 ) , and the co - editor of Rewriting the Renaissance : The Discourses of Sexual Difference in Early Modern Europe ( 1986 ) . She is presently at work on a collection of ...
... Female Authority : Christine de Pizan's " Cité des Dames " ( 1991 ) , and the co - editor of Rewriting the Renaissance : The Discourses of Sexual Difference in Early Modern Europe ( 1986 ) . She is presently at work on a collection of ...
Page 7
... female sovereignty . Nancy Vickers asks how we can make sense of a more modestly reproduced object : a tiny volume published in 1539 which included the Hecatomphile and two separate collections of poems . There is no single author from ...
... female sovereignty . Nancy Vickers asks how we can make sense of a more modestly reproduced object : a tiny volume published in 1539 which included the Hecatomphile and two separate collections of poems . There is no single author from ...
Page 8
... female work . Along with Quilligan , Margaret Ferguson considers gender in relation- ship to what Arjun Appadurai has called the " social life of things , " in this case , feathers as they circulate ( or are 8 Margreta de Grazia ...
... female work . Along with Quilligan , Margaret Ferguson considers gender in relation- ship to what Arjun Appadurai has called the " social life of things , " in this case , feathers as they circulate ( or are 8 Margreta de Grazia ...
Page 9
... female writing subject . Ferguson argues that while Behn may interrogate the stability of gender categories , she simultaneously reinstates slavery as spectacle . The fetishized feathers come to represent a crucial ambivalence in the ...
... female writing subject . Ferguson argues that while Behn may interrogate the stability of gender categories , she simultaneously reinstates slavery as spectacle . The fetishized feathers come to represent a crucial ambivalence in the ...
Contents
The ideology of superfluous things King Lear as period piece | 17 |
Rude mechanicals | 43 |
Spensers domestic domain poetry property and the Early Modern subject | 83 |
Materializations | 131 |
Gendering the Crown | 133 |
The unauthored 1539 volume in which is printed the Hecatomphile The Flowers of French Poetry and Other Soothing Things | 166 |
Dematerializations textile and textual properties in Ovid Sandys and Spenser | 189 |
Appropriations | 211 |
Unlearning the Aztec cantares preliminaries to a postcolonial history | 260 |
Fetishisms | 287 |
Worn worlds clothes and identity on the Renaissance stage | 289 |
The Countess of Pembrokes literal translation | 321 |
Remnants of the sacred in Early Modern England | 337 |
Objections | 347 |
The insincerity of women | 349 |
Desire is death | 369 |
Other editions - View all
Subject and Object in Renaissance Culture Margreta de Grazia,Maureen Quilligan,Peter Stallybrass No preview available - 1996 |
Common terms and phrases
actors Amoretti Arachne Arachne's argued aristocratic artisans Aztec Behn Behn's Blazon body Cambridge cantares Cantares mexicanos century clothes Clouts Come Home Colin Clouts costumes countess court courtly cultural death desire discourse Early Modern edition Edmund Spenser Elizabeth Elizabethan England English Epithalamion essay European example Faerie Queene female figure Freud gender genre Greenblatt Hecatomphile Henslowe ideology indigenous Ireland John joining King King Lear labor language Lear Lear's literary livery London luxury male Mary Sidney material metaphor Mexica Midsummer Night's Dream Milton Munster plantation mutability Nahuatl object orgasm Oroonoko Ovid painting Petrarch play play's poem poet poetic poetry political reading relation Renaissance rhetoric royal rude mechanicals scene sexual Shakespeare Sidney slave slavery social song sonnet Spenser stage Stephen Greenblatt Stephen Orgel suggests superfluous tapestry theater theatrical Theseus things tion trans translation Velázquez woman women words writing York