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      'Shall She Famish Then?'
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      Book

      'Shall She Famish Then?'

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      'Shall She Famish Then?' book

      Female Food Refusal in Early Modern England

      'Shall She Famish Then?'

      DOI link for 'Shall She Famish Then?'

      'Shall She Famish Then?' book

      Female Food Refusal in Early Modern England
      ByNancy A. Gutierrez
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2003
      eBook Published 17 November 2016
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315243306
      Pages 160
      eBook ISBN 9781315243306
      Subjects Humanities, Language & Literature, Social Sciences
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      Gutierrez, N.A. (2003). 'Shall She Famish Then?': Female Food Refusal in Early Modern England (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315243306

      ABSTRACT

      Nancy Gutierrez's exploration of female food refusal during the early modern period contributes to the ongoing conversation about female subjectivity and agency in a number of ways. She joins such scholars as Gail Kern Paster, Jonathan Sawday, and Michael Schoenfeldt, who locate early modern ideas of selfhood in the age's understanding of the body and bodily functions, that is, the recognition that behavior and feelings are a result of the internal workings of the body. Exploring the portrayals of the anorectic woman in the work of Ford, Shakespeare, Heywood and others and arguing that the survival of these women undermines regulatory policies exercised over them by those in authority, Gutierrez here demonstrates how female food refusal is a unique demonstration of individuality. The chapters of this book reveal how the common cultural association of women and food manifests itself in the early modern period-not as religious expression, which is the medieval representation, and not as an expression of dysfunctional adolescence and maturation, our own contemporary view, but rather as a trope in which the female body is a site of political apprehension and cultural change. This study is neither a history nor a survey of the anorectic female body in early modern England, but rather individual yet related discussions in which the starved female body is seen to signify certain (un)expressed tensions within the culture.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter 1|24 pages

      Contexts and Methodologies

      chapter 2|10 pages

      The Public Rendering of Margaret Ratcliffe’s Death

      chapter 3|18 pages

      Fasting and Prayer in A Woman Killed with Kindness: Religious Salvation and Political Resistance

      chapter 4|26 pages

      ‘Starved! starved!’: Anatomy and Food Refusal in John Ford’s The Broken Heart

      chapter 5|24 pages

      ‘The Maiden neither eate nor drank one morsel or droppe’: Miracle Maidens as Colonial Objects

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