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Cover of Flaunting

Flaunting

Style and the Subversive Male Body in Renaissance England

By Amanda Bailey

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Publish Date

September 15, 2007

Publisher

University of Toronto Press

Language

eng

Pages

266

Description:

"In the early modern period, the theatre offered one of the most popular forms of entertainment and aesthetic pleasure. It also fulfilled an important cultural function by displaying modes of behaviour and dramatizing social interaction within a community. Flaunting argues that the theatre in late sixteenth-century England created the conditions for a subculture of style, whose members identified themselves by their sartorial extravagance and social impudence." "Drawing on evidence from legal documents, economic treatises, domestic manuals, accounts of playhouse practices, and stage plays, Amanda Bailey critiques the standard accounts, which maintain that those who flaunted their apparel were simply aspirants, or gaudy versions of the superiors they sought to emulate. Instead, she suggests that what mattered most was not what these young men wore but how they wore their clothes. These young men shared a distinctive sartorial sensibility and used that sensibility to undermine authority at all levels of society. Flaunting therefore examines male style as a visual means of subverting the norms of Renaissance England with the stage as the primary source of inspiration for collective identification."--BOOK JACKET.