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Consuming Narratives: Gender and Monstrous Appetite in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance

Consuming Narratives: Gender and Monstrous Appetite in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance in Bloomington, MN
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While moralists may stress the importance of the proper management of appetite, medieval and early modern narratives are full of images of monstrous and deformed appetites running out of control.
Consuming Narratives
examines the significance of these concepts, metaphors and narratives of appetite for understanding gender, politics, race and nation in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
The essays in this wide-ranging collection consider appetite in relation to sexual and textual consumption, monstrous bodies, and genders, races and nations. Each section is introduced by a leading academic in the field, while individual papers deal with a variety of texts, from the
Revelations of Divine Love
to Massinger’s
The Sea Voyage
, and cover topics ranging from trade and colonialism to vampires, witchcraft and the
sheela-na-gig
figure.
analyses representations of monstrous appetites, highlights the role of consumption within narrative practices and considers the ways in which appetites and ideas about them contributed to the production of textual, human and national bodies. It will be an essential book for all those interested in the intersections of gender, politics and narrative in the medieval and early modern periods.
Consuming Narratives
examines the significance of these concepts, metaphors and narratives of appetite for understanding gender, politics, race and nation in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
The essays in this wide-ranging collection consider appetite in relation to sexual and textual consumption, monstrous bodies, and genders, races and nations. Each section is introduced by a leading academic in the field, while individual papers deal with a variety of texts, from the
Revelations of Divine Love
to Massinger’s
The Sea Voyage
, and cover topics ranging from trade and colonialism to vampires, witchcraft and the
sheela-na-gig
figure.
analyses representations of monstrous appetites, highlights the role of consumption within narrative practices and considers the ways in which appetites and ideas about them contributed to the production of textual, human and national bodies. It will be an essential book for all those interested in the intersections of gender, politics and narrative in the medieval and early modern periods.