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Livres anciens et modernes

Crawford, Katherine

Perilous Performances: Gender and Regency in Early Modern France.

Cambridge - London : Harvard University Press, 2004.,

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Détails

ISBN
9780674015418
Auteur
Crawford, Katherine
Éditeurs
Cambridge, London : Harvard University Press, 2004.
Format
Harvard Historical Studies ; 145. X, 297 p., ill. Original cloth with dust jacket.
Jaquette
Non
Langues
Anglais
Dédicacée
Non
Premiére Edition
Non

Description

From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - Rubbed jacket, allover very good and clean. / Beriebener Umschlag, insgesamt sehr gut und sauber. - Contents: Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Power and Authority: Lineages of Regency and the Gendering of Political Entitlement -- 2. Catherine de M�cis: Staging the Political Woman -- 3. Contesting the Politics of the State: Marie de M�cis, Royal Familiality, and Gender Performance, 1610-1643 -- 4. Evacuating the Center: Anne d�Autriche and the Alinority of Louis XIV -- 5. The Male Regent: Philippe d�Orl�s and the Traditions of Regency Government -- 6. Revolution and Regency: Killing the Past -- Conclusion. - In a book addressing those interested in the transformation of monarchy into the modern state and in intersections of gender and political power, Katherine Crawford examines the roles of female regents in early modern France. The reigns of child kings loosened the normative structure in which adult males headed the body politic, setting the stage for innovative claims to authority made on gendered terms. When assuming the regency, Catherine de M�cis presented herself as dutiful mother, devoted widow, and benign peacemaker, masking her political power. In subsequent regencies, Marie de M�cis and Anne of Austria developed strategies that naturalized a regendering of political structures. They succeeded so thoroughly that Philippe d�Orl�s found that this rhetoric at first supported but ultimately undermined his authority. Regencies demonstrated that power did not necessarily work from the places, bodies, or genders in which it was presumed to reside. While broadening the terms of monarchy, regencies involving complex negotiations among child kings, queen mothers, and royal uncles made clear that the state continued regardless of the king�a point not lost on the Revolutionaries or irrelevant to the fate of Marie-Antoinette. - KATHERINE CRAWFORD is Assistant Professor of History at Vanderbilt University. ISBN 9780674015418