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Presenting Gender: Changing Sex in Early-Modern Culture [Hardback]

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Presenting Gender engages with one of the most intriguing aspects of Early Modern and Enlightenment culture: gender passing, the phenomenon of passing oneself off as a member of the opposite biological sex. This collection of ten historically informed and theoretically sophisticated essays by European and American scholars employs "passing" as a pivotal practical, ideological, and textual term for investigating the relations among gender, sex, subjectivity, politics, and economics in a wide range of texts and social and cultural practices during the period 1600-1800. The relations between sex and gender, and biology and culture are found to be imbricated but not indissociable. Together, the contributors demonstrate that the identification of passing with sexual motivations suggested that the sexual body was perceived to be stable, though capable of being categorized into more than two sexes, while the association of passing with political motivations tended to privilege the body's cultural construction. At the same time, the contributors find a reverse set of polarities to be true for gender. Those who passed in early-modern and eighteenth-century culture for sexual reasons suggested that gender was unstable, while those who passed for political reasons suggested its stability. Rich in detail and methodologically rigorous, Presenting Gender makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the shift from Renaissance and Restoration to Enlightenment understandings of identity generally, and sexual identity specifically, and will complicate the hitherto rather rigid periodization of the years 1600-1800.
List of Illustrations
7(2)
Acknowledgments 9(2)
Introduction 11(18)
Part One Passing Identities
"Be Male and Female Still": An ABC of Hyperbolic Masculinity in the Eighteenth Century
29(20)
Conrad Brunstrom
Women Behaving Well: Early Modern Images of Female Courage
49(27)
Carolyn D. Williams
Voice, Gender, and the Augustan Verse Epistle
76(18)
Karina Williamson
The Fop, the Canting Queen, and the Deferral of Gender
94(42)
Thomas A. King
Cross-dressing and the Nature of Gender in Mary Robinson's Walsingham
136(35)
Julie Shaffer
Part Two Passing Politics
The Metamorphosis of Sex(uality): Ovid's "Iphis and Ianthe" in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
171(31)
David Michael Robinson
Enigmatic Gender in Delarivier Manley's New Atalantis
202(23)
Ruth Herman
The Key to Stowe: Toward a Patriot Whig Reading of Eliza Haywood's Eovaai
225(30)
Elizabeth Kubek
The Very Scandal of Her Tea Table: Eliza Haywood's Response to the Whig Public Sphere
255(19)
Rachel K. Carnell
"To the Women of Both Sexes": Christopher Smart, Mrs. Mary Midnight, and the Voice of the Dissident Woman Writer
274(20)
Chris Mounsey
Contributors 294(2)
Index 296
Chris Mounsey is a Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Winchester. He is the author of Christopher Smart: Clown of God (2001) and editor of Presenting Gender: Changing Sex in Early-Modern Culture (2001), both from Bucknell University Press.