Men in Women's Clothing: Anti-theatricality and Effeminization, 1579-1642

by Laura Levine

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In 1597 anti-theatricalist Stephen Gosson made the curious remark that theatre 'effeminized' the mind. Four years later Phillip Stubbes claimed that male actors who wore women's clothing could literally 'adulterate' male gender and fifty years after this in a tract which may have hastened the closing of the theatres, William Prynne described a man whom women's clothing had literally caused to 'degenerate' into a women. How can we account for such fears of effeminization and what did Renaissance playwrights do with such a legacy? Laura Levine examines the ways in which Shakespeare, Marlowe and Jonson addressed a generation's anxieties about gender and the stage and identifies the way the same 'magical thinking' informed documents we much more readily associate with extreme forms of cultural paranoia: documents dedicated to the extermination of witches.
  • ISBN13 9780521455077
  • Publish Date 13 October 1994
  • Publish Status Inactive
  • Out of Print 10 May 2009
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Cambridge University Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 195
  • Language English