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Renaissance Culture and the Everyday /

It was not unusual during the Renaissance for cooks to torture animals before slaughtering them in order to render the meat more tender, for women to use needlepoint to cover up their misconduct and prove their obedience, and for people to cover the walls of their own homes with graffiti.Items and a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Hunt, Simon, 1967- (Editor ), Fumerton, Patricia (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, [1999]
Colección:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo

MARC

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245 0 0 |a Renaissance Culture and the Everyday /   |c edited by Patricia Fumerton and Simon Hunt. 
264 1 |a Philadelphia :  |b University of Pennsylvania Press,  |c [1999] 
264 3 |a Baltimore, Md. :  |b Project MUSE,   |c 2015 
264 4 |c ©[1999] 
300 |a 1 online resource (344 pages):   |b illustrations 
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490 0 |a New cultural studies 
505 0 |a Cover; Renaissance Culture and the Everyday; Title; Copyright; Contents; 1. Introduction: A New New Historicism; Part I: Materials of the Everyday; 2. The ""I"" of the Beholder: Renaissance Mirrors and the Reflexive Mind; 3. ""Reasonable Creatures"": William Cavendish and the Art of Dressage; 4. ""Pox on Your Distinction!"": Humanist Reformation and Deformations of the Everyday in The Staple of News; 5. Homely Accents: Ben Jonson Speaking Low; Part II: The Everyday Making of Women; 6. Everyday Life, Longevity, and Nuns in Early Modern Florence. 
505 0 |a 7. Constructing the Female Self: Architectural Structures in Mary Wroth's Urania8. The Buck Basket, the Witch, and the Queen of Fairies: The Women's World of Shakespeare's Windsor; 9. Three Ways to be Invisible in the Renaissance: Sex, Reputation, and Stitchery; 10. Household Chastisements: Gender, Authority, and ""Domestic Violence""; Part III: Everyday Transgressions; 11. Money and the Regulation of Desire: The Prostitute and the Marketplace in Seventeenth-Century Holland; 12. Reorganizing Knowledge: A Feminist Scholar's Everyday Relation to the Florentine Past. 
505 0 |a 13. ""The Catastrophe Is a Nuptial"": Love)s Labor)s Lost, Tactics, Everyday Life14. ""Leaving Out the Insurrection"": Carnival Rebellion, English History Plays, and a Hermeneutics of Advocacy; 15. Graffiti, Grammatology, and the Age of Shakespeare; List of Contributors; Index; Acknowledgments. 
520 |a It was not unusual during the Renaissance for cooks to torture animals before slaughtering them in order to render the meat more tender, for women to use needlepoint to cover up their misconduct and prove their obedience, and for people to cover the walls of their own homes with graffiti.Items and activities as familiar as mirrors, books, horses, everyday speech, money, laundry baskets, graffiti, embroidery, and food preparation look decidedly less familiar when seen through the eyes of Renaissance men and women. In Renaissance Culture and the Everyday, such scholars as Judith Brown, Frances Dolan, Richard Helgerson, Debora Shuger, Don Wayne, and Stephanie Jed illuminate the sometimes surprising issues at stake in just such common matters of everyday life during the Renaissance in England and on the Continent.Organized around the categories of materiality, women, and transgression--and constantly crossing these categories--the book promotes and challenges readers' thinking of the everyday. While not ignoring the aristocratic, it foregrounds the common person, the marginal, and the domestic even as it presents the unusual details of their existence. What results is an expansive, variegated, and sometimes even contradictory vision in which the strange becomes not alien but a defining mark of everyday life. 
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