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Renaissance Culture and the Everyday Book

Renaissance Culture and the Everyday
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Renaissance Culture and the Everyday, It was not unusual during the Renaissance for cooks to torture animals before slaughtering them in order to render the meat more tender, for women to use needlepoint to cover up their misconduct and prove their obedience, and for people to cover the walls, Renaissance Culture and the Everyday
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  • Renaissance Culture and the Everyday
  • Written by author Patricia Fumerton
  • Published by University of Pennsylvania Press, 1998/11/25
  • It was not unusual during the Renaissance for cooks to torture animals before slaughtering them in order to render the meat more tender, for women to use needlepoint to cover up their misconduct and prove their obedience, and for people to cover the walls
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Authors

1 Introduction: A New New Historicism 1
2 The "I" of the Beholder: Renaissance Mirrors and the Reflexive Mind 21
3 "Reasonable Creatures": William Cavendish and the Art of Dressage 42
4 "Pox on Your Distinction!": Humanist Reformation and Deformations of the Everyday in The Staple of News 67
5 Homely Accents: Ben Jonson Speaking Low 92
6 Everyday Life, Longevity, and Nuns in Early Modern Florence 115
7 Constructing the Female Self: Architectural Structures in Mary Wroth's Urania 139
8 The Buck Basket, the Witch, and the Queen of Fairies: The Women's World of Shakespeare's Windsor 162
9 Three Ways to be Invisible in the Renaissance: Sex, Reputation, and Stitchery 183
10 Household Chastisements: Gender, Authority, and "Domestic Violence" 204
11 Money and the Regulation of Desire: The Prostitute and the Marketplace in Seventeenth-Century Holland 229
12 Reorganizing Knowledge: A Feminist Scholar's Everyday Relation to the Florentine Past 254
13 "The Catastrophe Is a Nuptial": Love's Labor's Lost, Tactics, Everyday Life 271
14 "Leaving Out the Insurrection": Carnival Rebellion, English History Plays, and a Hermeneutics of Advocacy 299
15 Graffiti, Grammatology, and the Age of Shakespeare 315
List of Contributors 353
Index 357
Acknowledgments 367


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Renaissance Culture and the Everyday, It was not unusual during the Renaissance for cooks to torture animals before slaughtering them in order to render the meat more tender, for women to use needlepoint to cover up their misconduct and prove their obedience, and for people to cover the walls, Renaissance Culture and the Everyday

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Renaissance Culture and the Everyday, It was not unusual during the Renaissance for cooks to torture animals before slaughtering them in order to render the meat more tender, for women to use needlepoint to cover up their misconduct and prove their obedience, and for people to cover the walls, Renaissance Culture and the Everyday

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Renaissance Culture and the Everyday, It was not unusual during the Renaissance for cooks to torture animals before slaughtering them in order to render the meat more tender, for women to use needlepoint to cover up their misconduct and prove their obedience, and for people to cover the walls, Renaissance Culture and the Everyday

Renaissance Culture and the Everyday

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