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Early Modern English Noblewomen and Self-starvation: The Skull Beneath the Skin is a unique exploration of why early modern noblewomen starved themselves, how they understood their behaviour, and how it was interpreted and received by their contemporaries.
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Early Modern English Noblewomen and Self-starvation: The Skull Beneath the Skin is a unique exploration of why early modern noblewomen starved themselves, how they understood their behaviour, and how it was interpreted and received by their contemporaries.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 262
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 160mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9781138280441
- ISBN-10: 1138280445
- Artikelnr.: 55462232
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 262
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 160mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9781138280441
- ISBN-10: 1138280445
- Artikelnr.: 55462232
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Sasha Garwood is an interdisciplinary scholar focusing on gender, sex and food as a nexus of cultural anxieties from the early modern period to the present. She studied at UCL and Keble College Oxford, is currently a Fellow of the Humanities Research Institute at the University of Sheffield, and teaches History at Sheffield and English Literature at the University of Nottingham.
Introduction; Contexts: 1. Modern vs early modern bodies: anorexia nervosa
and other historically situated forms of self-starvation; 2. Fasting and
food in early modern society: 'At dinner, supper or in taverns'; 3. Women,
food and early modern households, 'None other wyse than the capitaine of a
garison'; 4. The female body in early modern England - 'Oh, that we may
call these delicate creatures ours/and not their appetites!'; 5. Women and
self-starvation on the Renaissance stage - 'Dead' 'Dead!' 'Starved!'; Case
Studies: 6. Catherine of Aragon and Mary Tudor: eating and identity,
royalty and resistance; 7. 'The body of a weak and feeble woman': Elizabeth
and eating, power, politics and penetration; 8. 'With my body, I thee
worship': The tragedy of Lady Katherine Grey; 9. 'So Wilfully Bent':
Arbella Stuart, starvation, strategy and survival; Conclusion: The skull
beneath the skin: starvation and embodied selfhood then and now;
Bibliography; Appendix: supporting studies on modern eating disorders, a
selection
and other historically situated forms of self-starvation; 2. Fasting and
food in early modern society: 'At dinner, supper or in taverns'; 3. Women,
food and early modern households, 'None other wyse than the capitaine of a
garison'; 4. The female body in early modern England - 'Oh, that we may
call these delicate creatures ours/and not their appetites!'; 5. Women and
self-starvation on the Renaissance stage - 'Dead' 'Dead!' 'Starved!'; Case
Studies: 6. Catherine of Aragon and Mary Tudor: eating and identity,
royalty and resistance; 7. 'The body of a weak and feeble woman': Elizabeth
and eating, power, politics and penetration; 8. 'With my body, I thee
worship': The tragedy of Lady Katherine Grey; 9. 'So Wilfully Bent':
Arbella Stuart, starvation, strategy and survival; Conclusion: The skull
beneath the skin: starvation and embodied selfhood then and now;
Bibliography; Appendix: supporting studies on modern eating disorders, a
selection
Introduction; Contexts: 1. Modern vs early modern bodies: anorexia nervosa and other historically situated forms of self-starvation; 2. Fasting and food in early modern society: 'At dinner, supper or in taverns'; 3. Women, food and early modern households, 'None other wyse than the capitaine of a garison'; 4. The female body in early modern England - 'Oh, that we may call these delicate creatures ours/and not their appetites!'; 5. Women and self-starvation on the Renaissance stage - 'Dead' 'Dead!' 'Starved!'; Case Studies: 6. Catherine of Aragon and Mary Tudor: eating and identity, royalty and resistance; 7. 'The body of a weak and feeble woman': Elizabeth and eating, power, politics and penetration; 8. 'With my body, I thee worship': The tragedy of Lady Katherine Grey; 9. 'So Wilfully Bent': Arbella Stuart, starvation, strategy and survival; Conclusion: The skull beneath the skin: starvation and embodied selfhood then and now; Bibliography; Appendix: supporting studies on modern eating disorders, a selection
Introduction; Contexts: 1. Modern vs early modern bodies: anorexia nervosa
and other historically situated forms of self-starvation; 2. Fasting and
food in early modern society: 'At dinner, supper or in taverns'; 3. Women,
food and early modern households, 'None other wyse than the capitaine of a
garison'; 4. The female body in early modern England - 'Oh, that we may
call these delicate creatures ours/and not their appetites!'; 5. Women and
self-starvation on the Renaissance stage - 'Dead' 'Dead!' 'Starved!'; Case
Studies: 6. Catherine of Aragon and Mary Tudor: eating and identity,
royalty and resistance; 7. 'The body of a weak and feeble woman': Elizabeth
and eating, power, politics and penetration; 8. 'With my body, I thee
worship': The tragedy of Lady Katherine Grey; 9. 'So Wilfully Bent':
Arbella Stuart, starvation, strategy and survival; Conclusion: The skull
beneath the skin: starvation and embodied selfhood then and now;
Bibliography; Appendix: supporting studies on modern eating disorders, a
selection
and other historically situated forms of self-starvation; 2. Fasting and
food in early modern society: 'At dinner, supper or in taverns'; 3. Women,
food and early modern households, 'None other wyse than the capitaine of a
garison'; 4. The female body in early modern England - 'Oh, that we may
call these delicate creatures ours/and not their appetites!'; 5. Women and
self-starvation on the Renaissance stage - 'Dead' 'Dead!' 'Starved!'; Case
Studies: 6. Catherine of Aragon and Mary Tudor: eating and identity,
royalty and resistance; 7. 'The body of a weak and feeble woman': Elizabeth
and eating, power, politics and penetration; 8. 'With my body, I thee
worship': The tragedy of Lady Katherine Grey; 9. 'So Wilfully Bent':
Arbella Stuart, starvation, strategy and survival; Conclusion: The skull
beneath the skin: starvation and embodied selfhood then and now;
Bibliography; Appendix: supporting studies on modern eating disorders, a
selection
Introduction; Contexts: 1. Modern vs early modern bodies: anorexia nervosa and other historically situated forms of self-starvation; 2. Fasting and food in early modern society: 'At dinner, supper or in taverns'; 3. Women, food and early modern households, 'None other wyse than the capitaine of a garison'; 4. The female body in early modern England - 'Oh, that we may call these delicate creatures ours/and not their appetites!'; 5. Women and self-starvation on the Renaissance stage - 'Dead' 'Dead!' 'Starved!'; Case Studies: 6. Catherine of Aragon and Mary Tudor: eating and identity, royalty and resistance; 7. 'The body of a weak and feeble woman': Elizabeth and eating, power, politics and penetration; 8. 'With my body, I thee worship': The tragedy of Lady Katherine Grey; 9. 'So Wilfully Bent': Arbella Stuart, starvation, strategy and survival; Conclusion: The skull beneath the skin: starvation and embodied selfhood then and now; Bibliography; Appendix: supporting studies on modern eating disorders, a selection