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Man, woman or monster : some themes of f   Man, woman or monster : some themes of f... - PDF Document (13 M)
Title Man, woman or monster : some themes of female masculinity and transvestism in the Middle Ages and Renaissance
Creator Abdalla, Laila.
Contributor Williams, David (advisor)
Date 1996
Abstract This dissertation discusses medieval and Renaissance clerical and cultural constructions of femininity and female masculinity, and it analyses the complex relationship between such conceptions and the literary representation of the transvestite woman. Medieval theology legitimated female masculinity as transcendence of temporal sexuality. A woman who contained her affective femininity and replaced it with rational and ascetic behaviour was frequently lauded for having become male in all but body. In the middle of the first millennium, hagiographic legends abounded in which women appear to have embodied the patristic equation between spiritual rationality and masculinity. This dissertation proposes a radically different interpretation: the saint exchanges a sexualised form of femininity--ironically imposed upon her by a male society--for a non sexual but nevertheless feminine self valuation. Early modern culture perceived transvestism in a multiform manner. It signifies monstrosity in the polemical pamphlet, serves to indicate an estimable apex of humanity in Shakespearean comedy, and represents women in roles that range from monstrous disrupter to adept uniter in the works of such other playwrights as Ben Jonson and Thomas Middleton. While the pamphlet's social commentary argues that masculinity rendered a woman monstrously unfeminine, the literature finds ways of interrogating definitions of the sex-gender system in a world which was constantly and fundamentally mutating. The drama employs elements such as inversion, monstrosity and transgressions of class to negotiate a society in flux.
Subject Gender identity -- History.
Femininity.
Transvestism.
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Department Department of English.
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URL of this record http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/-?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=41958&silo_library=GEN01
PID 41958
Number of Downloads 341
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