ABSTRACT
This book explores the intricate connections between the body and narrative across the early modern world. It examines how bodily aspects shaped the creation of stories and vice versa. The writing, telling, or interpreting of a story is inherently tied to corporeal acts and is, to varying degrees, shaped by them. Likewise, narrativity—the narrative form, including the framing and structuring elements that define a story’s meaning—can influence how the body is experienced, understood, and valued. Adopting an interdisciplinary approach and incorporating case studies from Africa, the Americas, and Europe, this volume positions the body as a critical heuristic tool. It moves beyond the dichotomous debate between constructivism and essentialism by emphasizing the interplay of body and narrative.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |102 pages
I Body, Skin, and Colonial Narratives
chapter 1|32 pages
Conflicting Narratives of African Body Markings and Black Corporeality in Eighteenth-Century Brazil
chapter 2|22 pages
Epidermal Writing, Colonial Semiosis, and Apocalypticism in Colonial Latin America: The Case of Diego de Landa (1524–1579)
part II|22 pages
Corporeal Narratives and Political Power
chapter 3|20 pages
Pregnant Bodies and Their Narratives : The Letters of Empress Maria Theresa to Maria Beatrice d'Este
part III|60 pages
Bodies and Autobiographical Writing
chapter 5|18 pages
“My soul takes no other alarm than the sensible and corporeal” : Montaigne's Essays as Bodily Autobiography
chapter 7|22 pages
Narrating Her Life as an Amazon: Katharina Franziska von Wattenwyl's Mémoires (1714)
part IV|42 pages
Corporeality in Literature and Theatre
