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"No previous scholar has captured the ambiguity, not just of Elizabeth s self-presentation, but of her very identity in such a compelling way. Previous scholarship skirts an impasse between scholars who see Elizabeth as the intersection of limiting and empowering discourses and others who see her as the apex of all power structures within her realm. Whereas one party sees her as the ultimate object of history, the other sees her as its ultimate subject. For Riehl, Elizabeth is both and neither. The Elizabeth that she brings to us is the perennial focus of historical,literary, and art historical investigations precisely because she resists definitive treatment. In a sense, Riehl suggests that Elizabeth s sheer unknowability is what keeps us all - scholars, casual readers, and cinemagoers - coming back to her." - John Watkins, Professor of English, University of Minnesota
"This luminous and wonderfully inventive study of Elizabeth s face, in all its many legendary and historical metamorphoses - in person and on the page, stage, and canvas - shows that for a monarch, especially a female monarch, the face was the locus where power and personality were constructed and challenged, where beauty was fashioned and eternized, where imperfections were discerned and concealed, where meaning was made and judgments formed, as surely as a smile flashes or a shadow darkens." - Ilona Bell, Samuel Fessenden Clarke Professor of English, Williams College