Bent out of Shape: The Projection of Male Anxiety onto Busks and Stays in Early Modern Europe

Julia R. Miller
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Abstract

An interesting pattern emerges in the Early Modern Era of women taking control of their lives and bodies through the use of material culture, and men being terrified of this fact. Women often lacked agency in a world with ever-changing perceptions of not only femininity, but also of the female form. Clothing was then one of the few ways that these women who lacked power could control their body and their spheres. To those living in the Early Modern Era, clothing held far more meaning than it does in the modern day. The exchange of clothing among women was founded on and fundamental to the connections between them. It was transferred from “masters and mistresses to servants, from aunts to nieces, from sisters and brothers to younger siblings” in a “routine rotation” that was the life of a garment. Men and women alike understood the innate power of clothing in the Early Modern period and its ability to “transnature” the body it was on. Clothing had the power to “mold and shape” women into anything. Because of its transformative nature, for many women clothing was one of the few places where they could exert their control: through purchasing power, shaping their public presentation and—for lower class women—even manufacturing or selling.  Busks and stays are one item which was targeted by masculinity in the early modern period because of their connection to both women and sexuality more specifically.
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变形:近代早期欧洲街头艺人和旅人身上男性焦虑的投射
近代早期出现了一种有趣的模式,女性通过物质文化控制了自己的生活和身体,而男性对此感到恐惧。在一个不仅对女性气质,而且对女性形体的看法都在不断变化的世界里,女性往往缺乏能动性。当时,服装是这些缺乏权力的女性控制自己身体和领域的为数不多的方式之一。对于那些生活在现代早期的人来说,衣服比现在有更多的意义。妇女之间的服装交换是建立在她们之间的联系的基础上的。它从“主人和女主人到仆人,从阿姨到侄女,从姐妹和兄弟到弟弟妹妹”,以一种“例行轮换”的方式进行,这就是一件衣服的生命。在现代早期,男人和女人都明白衣服的内在力量,以及它“自然化”身体的能力。服装有能力把女人塑造成任何东西。由于其变革性,对许多女性来说,服装是她们可以发挥控制力的为数不多的领域之一:通过购买力,塑造她们的公开形象,对下层女性来说,甚至是制造或销售。在现代早期,街头艺人是男性的目标之一,因为他们更具体地与女性和性有关。
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