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Ecology of Dress in Shakespeare and His Contemporaries [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Université Clermont Auvergne, France), Edited by (Université Sorbonne-Nouvelle in Paris)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 296 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 11 black and white illustrations, 5 colour illustrations
  • Sari: Edinburgh Critical Studies in Renaissance Culture
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Nov-2024
  • Kirjastus: Edinburgh University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1399522140
  • ISBN-13: 9781399522144
  • Formaat: Hardback, 296 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 11 black and white illustrations, 5 colour illustrations
  • Sari: Edinburgh Critical Studies in Renaissance Culture
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Nov-2024
  • Kirjastus: Edinburgh University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1399522140
  • ISBN-13: 9781399522144

Offers an ecocritical approach to understanding dress in early modern plays and performance



This volume posits that clothing in the early modern period was conceived of as the prime interface between the human body and its multiple environments. Both a second skin and a human-made artefact, dress can indeed be considered as the most immediate site for the elaboration of any sort of ecology, in its etymological sense of a ‘discourse’ of the oikos, or of the place we inhabit. This collection shows how early modern English literature, and drama in particular, interrogates the crucial relationship between humans and the world that surrounds them in its staging of dress. It also argues that the theatrical productions of the time derived much of their creative energy from this process, by which climates and their effects were translated and embodied through dress on the mediating stage. Its various chapters study early modern clothes in their ecosystems and challenge the inside/outside, natural/artificial and body/environment binaries.

Arvustused

With a keen eye to the plant and animal origins of Renaissance costume, this resplendent collection reveals how the environment is present on stage in the warp and weft of textiles and play-texts. Moving beyond Shakespeare and encompassing fabrics ranging from dirty linen and rags to luxurious furs and silks, the thirteen essays succeed brilliantly in retheorising the playhouse as a site of ecomaterial entanglement. The Ecology of Dress in Shakespeare and His Contemporaries is historical ecocriticism of the finest yarn. -- Todd Borlik, Purdue University

List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Series Editors' Preface

Introduction
Sophie Chiari and Anne-Marie Miller-Blaise
Part I. Fashioning Nativeness and Foreignness
1. Without a National Dress but with a Climate of Their Own: The Invention of
the English Climate and Constitution
Margaret Tudeau-Clayton
2. The Clothes of Insularity in Brownes Inner Temple Masque
Elisabeth Lacombe
Part II. The Humours of Dress
3. Fabrics, Fashion and the Environment: Representing Venice in Early Modern
England
Anne Geoffroy
4. Come and see our frippery: Brainworms Humour of Necessity and Clothes
Trafficking in Ben Jonsons Every Man in His Humour
Anna Demoux
Part III. Clothing the Seasons of Life
5. Clad in Rags: Eco-psychology and Trans-textuality in the Lear stories
Danièle Berton-Charrière
6. O that I were a glove upon that hand: Love and Gloves in Shakespeare
François Laroque
7. Shakespeares Gaudy
Dympna Callaghan
Part IV. The Stuff That Gender Is Made Of
8. That quiff and pinner that hath the gillyflower: Flowers, Clothes and
Female Identities in Jane Cavendish and Elizabeth Brackleys The Concealed
Fancies
Lisa Hopkins
9. Fashioning Falstaff: Dress and Disguise in Shakespeares Henry the Fourth
and The Merry Wives of Windsor
Valentina Finger
10. Middletons Ambivalent Fashions
Chantal Schütz
Part V. The Wealth of Nature's Wardrobe: Playing With The Elements
11. Water and Costume: Wetness on the Early Modern Stage
Sophie Chiari
12. Dianas Shrouds and Black Tempests: Rites of Passage in Christopher
Marlowes Dido Queen of Carthage
Sélima Lejri
13. Changing Habits: The Politics and Theatricality of Clothing in Early
Modern English Voyages
Sophie Lemercier-Goddard
Notes on Contributors
Bibliography
Index
Sophie Chiari is Professor of Early Modern English Literature at Université Clermont Auvergne, France, where she is also the Director of the Maison des Sciences de lHomme de Clermont-Ferrand, a research institute encompassing the humanities and social sciences. A member of the IHRIM research team, she has edited or coedited various collections of essays including Performances at Court in the Age of Shakespeare (coedited with John Mucciolo, 2019) and The Experience of Disaster in Early Modern English Literature (2022). Her current research focuses on ecocritical issues in Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Her most recent works are Shakespeares Representation of Weather, Climate and Environment (2019) and Shakespeare and the Environment. A Dictionary (2022). Anne-Marie Miller-Blaise is Professor of Early Modern English Literature and Cultural Studies at the Université Sorbonne Nouvelle (Paris, France), where she also directs the Epistémè research group within the PRISMES research centre. She was awarded a Research Fellowship by the Institut Universitaire for a project on the interconnectedness of poetic and material circulations within Early Modern Europe (20162021). Originally a specialist of poetry and religious history, she was the 2011 recipient of the SAES (French Society for English Studies) special research prize for her monograph on George Herbert, Le Verbe fait image (2010). She currently serves as the vice-president of the Société Française Shakespeare (the French Shakespeare association). Her research profile is interdisciplinary, publishing across genres and adopting a trans-regional perspective as well as a material approach to her analysis of Elizabethan and Jacobean poetry and drama, which are the centre of gravity of her work. She co-edited the volume of Shakespeares poetry in French translation for the Pléiade, Gallimard (2021), is currently working on a new French edition of Twelfth Night for Gallimard, and has recently translated Marlowes Massacre at Paris with Christine Sukic (forthcoming with Garnier Classiques).