The Body of the Queen : Gender and Rule in the Courtly World, 1500-2000 /
The Body of the Queen : Gender and Rule in the Courtly World, 1500-2000 /
ed. by Regina Schulte.
- 1 online resource (336 p.)
Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Foreword -- List of Contributors -- 1. Introduction -- Part I. Constructing the Body Politic -- 2. How Two Ladies Steal a Crown -- 3. Elizabeth When a Princess -- 4. Elizabeth through the Looking Glass -- 5. Royal Flesh, Gender and the Construction of Monarchy -- Part II. Transgressing the Body Natural -- 6. What the King Saw in the Belly of the Beast or How the 103 Lion Got in the Queen -- 7. Posterity and the Body of the Princess in German Court 125 Funeral Books -- 8 ‘Madame, Ma Chère Fille’ – ‘Dearest Child’ -- Part III. Queens of Modernity -- 9. Queen Margherita (1851–1926) -- 10. The Double Skin -- 11. Theatrical Monarchy -- 12. The Unmanly Emperor -- Part IV. Visual Metamorphoses -- 13. The ‘Berlin’ Nefertiti Bust -- 14. Imagined Queens between Heaven and Hell -- 15. Queer Queen -- Selected Bibliography -- Index
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
How many “bodies” does a queen have? What is the significance of multiple “bodies”? How has the gendered body been constructed and perceived within the context of the European courts during the course of the past five centuries? These are some of the questions addressed in this anthology, a contribution to the ongoing debate provoked by Ernst H. Kantorowicz in his seminal work from 1957, The King’s Two Bodies. On the basis of both textual self-presentations and visual representations a gradual transformation of the queen appears: A sacred/providential figure in medieval and early modern period, an ideal bourgeois wife during the late-18th and 19th Centuries, and a star-like (re-) presentation of royalty during the past century. Twentieth-century mass media has produced the celebrity and film star queens personified by the contested and enigmatic Nefertiti of ancient Egypt, the mysterious Elizabeth (Sisi) of Austria, Grace Kelly as Queen of both Hollywood and Monaco and Romy Schneider as the invented Empress.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9781845451592 9781782386278
10.1515/9781782386278 doi
Courts and courtiers--History--Congresses.
Courts and courtiers--History.
Human body--Social aspects--Congresses.
Queens--History--Congresses.
Queens--History.
Sex role--History--Congresses.
Sex role--History.
HISTORY / Women .
Gender Studies and Sexuality, History (General), Cultural Studies (General).
HQ1075 / .B639 2006
305.309
Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Foreword -- List of Contributors -- 1. Introduction -- Part I. Constructing the Body Politic -- 2. How Two Ladies Steal a Crown -- 3. Elizabeth When a Princess -- 4. Elizabeth through the Looking Glass -- 5. Royal Flesh, Gender and the Construction of Monarchy -- Part II. Transgressing the Body Natural -- 6. What the King Saw in the Belly of the Beast or How the 103 Lion Got in the Queen -- 7. Posterity and the Body of the Princess in German Court 125 Funeral Books -- 8 ‘Madame, Ma Chère Fille’ – ‘Dearest Child’ -- Part III. Queens of Modernity -- 9. Queen Margherita (1851–1926) -- 10. The Double Skin -- 11. Theatrical Monarchy -- 12. The Unmanly Emperor -- Part IV. Visual Metamorphoses -- 13. The ‘Berlin’ Nefertiti Bust -- 14. Imagined Queens between Heaven and Hell -- 15. Queer Queen -- Selected Bibliography -- Index
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
How many “bodies” does a queen have? What is the significance of multiple “bodies”? How has the gendered body been constructed and perceived within the context of the European courts during the course of the past five centuries? These are some of the questions addressed in this anthology, a contribution to the ongoing debate provoked by Ernst H. Kantorowicz in his seminal work from 1957, The King’s Two Bodies. On the basis of both textual self-presentations and visual representations a gradual transformation of the queen appears: A sacred/providential figure in medieval and early modern period, an ideal bourgeois wife during the late-18th and 19th Centuries, and a star-like (re-) presentation of royalty during the past century. Twentieth-century mass media has produced the celebrity and film star queens personified by the contested and enigmatic Nefertiti of ancient Egypt, the mysterious Elizabeth (Sisi) of Austria, Grace Kelly as Queen of both Hollywood and Monaco and Romy Schneider as the invented Empress.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9781845451592 9781782386278
10.1515/9781782386278 doi
Courts and courtiers--History--Congresses.
Courts and courtiers--History.
Human body--Social aspects--Congresses.
Queens--History--Congresses.
Queens--History.
Sex role--History--Congresses.
Sex role--History.
HISTORY / Women .
Gender Studies and Sexuality, History (General), Cultural Studies (General).
HQ1075 / .B639 2006
305.309

