The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Loading Inventory...

TARGET

Ambiguous Locks - by Roberta Milliken (Paperback)

From Mcfarland & Company

Current price: $45.00
Ambiguous Locks - by Roberta Milliken (Paperback)
Ambiguous Locks - by Roberta Milliken (Paperback)

TARGET

Ambiguous Locks - by Roberta Milliken (Paperback)

From Mcfarland & Company

Current price: $45.00
Loading Inventory...
Visit retailer's website
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact TARGET
About the Book It has long been said that a womans hair is her crowning glory. This interdisciplinary work explores the significance of womens hair in literature and art from the medieval period through 1525, putting into historical context the ways in which hair participates in construction of the female identity--Provided by publisher. Book Synopsis It has long been said that a womans hair is her crowning glory. Indeed, throughout history, hair has remained an important cultural symbol of femininity. In medieval art, iconic images of long, flowing locks can express sexuality, and the cutting of a womans hair often signals her feminine misbehavior. Artists of all kinds in the Middle Ages used womens long hair to manipulate their audiences estimation of their female figures. This interdisciplinary work explores the significance of womens hair in literature and art from the medieval period through 1525, putting into historical context the ways in which hair participates in construction of the female identity. Review Quotes examines representations of womens hair in works from the early medieval through the Early modern period and explores the ways in which these depictions communicated ideas about the roles, value and sexuality of women during the period.- SciTech Book News ; an interesting overview of a rich topic, written in admirably accessible language- Speculum . About the Author Roberta Milliken is a professor of English at Shawnee State University in Portsmouth, Ohio, where she teaches medieval and renaissance literature as well as womens studies classes.
Powered by Adeptmind