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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/15285
Title: Female Impersonation and Patriarchal Resilience in Early Stuart England
Authors: Thauvette, Chantelle
Advisor: Gough, Melinda
Ostovich, Helen
Silcox, Mary
Department: English and Cultural Studies
Keywords: Early Modern Literature;early modern women;female impersonation;English Civil War;Sarah Jinner;Swetnam the Woman-Hater;Cultural History;Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies;Literature in English, British Isles;Cultural History
Publication Date: Oct-2013
Abstract: <p>In seeking to explain why male authors assumed female pseudonyms in seventeenth-century literature, this dissertation explores male-to-female cross-dressing in Jacobean drama, effeminizing representations of parliament in Civil War propaganda, and parodies of women’s sexualized, political speech during the Interregnum and Restoration periods. My dissertation concludes that the sexualized female persona evolved over the course of the seventeenth century as a vehicle through which male authors could critique rival iterations of patriarchal hierarchy forwarded by Stuart kings and by parliament without challenging their own positions of masculine privilege within those hierarchies.</p> <p>My first chapter explores the political critiques of Jacobean absolutism embedded in the cross-gender performance narratives of Ben Jonson’s <em>Epicoene </em>(1609)<em> </em>and the anonymous play <em>Swetnam the Woman-Hater </em>(1620). In my second chapter I link male-to-female drag’s ability to critique an absolutist patriarchal paradigm to the satirical attacks on parliamentary models of polyvocal patriarchal rule in 1640s print. My final chapter investigates how female authors often find themselves shut out of the political discussions that female impersonations spark by taking up Sarah Jinner’s almanacs of 1658-60. Jinner’s almanacs combine predictions of rampant sexual wantonness with a critique of the waning Protectorate regime. I examine how the pseudonymous response to those almanacs from “Sarah Ginnor” depoliticizes Jinner’s sexual commentary on the Protectorate government.</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/15285
Identifier: opendissertations/8301
9414
4625557
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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