Pens and Needles
Autor Susan Fryeen Limba Engleză Paperback – mai 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780812222524
ISBN-10: 0812222520
Pagini: 344
Ilustrații: 21 color, 31 b/w illus.
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: University of Pennsylvania Press
ISBN-10: 0812222520
Pagini: 344
Ilustrații: 21 color, 31 b/w illus.
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: University of Pennsylvania Press
Cuprins
List of Illustrations Note on Spelling Preface Introduction Chapter 1. Political Designs: Elizabeth Tudor, Mary Stuart, and Bess of Hardwick Chapter 2. Miniatures and Manuscripts: Levina Teerlinc, Jane Segar, and Esther Inglis as Professional Artisans Chapter 3. Sewing Connections: Narratives of Agency in Women's Domestic Needlework Chapter 4. Staging Women's Relations to Textiles in Shakespeare's Othello and Cymbeline Chapter 5. Mary Sidney Wroth: Clothing Romance Notes Selected Bibliography Index Acknowledgments
Recenzii
"Susan Frye's book is a beautiful and powerful contribution to scholarship on early modern women's material culture... No other book covers such ground; Pens and Needles is an invaluable resource for art historians, social historians, literary critics, and anyone interested in the material world that early modern women made."-American Historical Review "Susan Frye's book is most fascinating in drawing out the histories and texts, both written and sewn, of less well-known women, and showing that they saw their needlework as equally articulate, valuable, and artful as their words."-TLS "Susan Frye's meticulously researched, beautifully illustrated, and brilliantly titled Pens and Needles makes a significant addition to a growing subfield in early modern gender studies: the expressive arts of women's needlework, which Frye sees as a mode of both female self-fashioning and creative communication."-Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 "Frye beautifully succeeds in aligning the different material practices, especially in the surprising discovery of a new portrait of Mary Queen of Scots embroidered by Bess of Hardwick."-Maureen Quilligan, Duke University "No other book analyzes the combination of visual, textile, and textual modes in relation to early modern women as this one does. Frye draws on a vast range of sources, from comments on the minutiae of Shakespeare's plays, to contemporary translations of the poems of Mary Stuart, to a range of theorists including Michel de Certeau, Marcel Mauss and Karl Marx, to make a complex and convincing argument about women's consciousness and work."-Ann Rosalind Jones, Smith College