Prosthetic gods: Subject/object in early modern England
Chapter One argues that the facial hair was a primary way in which masculinity was materialized in the Renaissance. Chapter Two focuses on the hair of the head, demonstrating that it too was crucial, and that it constituted not only gendered identities, but also the political identities that emerged...
Main Author: | Fisher, William Gerard |
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Corporate Author: | University of Pennsylvania |
Other Authors: | Rackin, Phyllis (advisor), Stallybrass, Peter (advisor) |
Format: | Thesis Book |
Language: | English |
Subjects: |
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