by Dympna Callaghan (Editor), M . Lindsay Kaplan (Editor), ValerieTraub (Editor)
How did the events of the early modern period affect the way gender and the self were represented? This collection of essays attempts to respond to this question by analysing a wide spectrum of cultural concerns - humanism, technology, science, law, anatomy, literacy, domesticity, colonialism, erotic practices, and the theatre - in order to delineate the history of subjectivity and its relationship with the postmodern fragmented subject. The scope of this analysis expands the terrain explored by feminist theory, while its feminist focus reveals that the subject is always gendered - although the terms in which gender is conceived and represented change across history. Feminist Readings of Early Modern Culture not only explores the representation of gendered subjects, but in its commitment to balancing the productive tensions of methodological diversity, also speaks to contemporary challenges facing feminism.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 10 Oct 1996
ISBN 10: 0521558190
ISBN 13: 9780521558198
Book Overview: The impact on women of the new developments of the Renaissance, and links with postmodernist femininity.