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Full Description
Revised and updated critical survey of the field of cosmetics and adornment studies
This revised edition examines how the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries dramatise the Renaissance preoccupation with cosmetics. Farah Karim-Cooper explores the then-contentious issue of female beauty and identifies a 'culture of cosmetics', which finds its visual identity on the early modern stage. She also examines cosmetic recipes and anti-cosmetic literature focusing on their relationship to drama in its representations of gender, race, politics and beauty.
Key Features
Offers a new analysis of the construction of whiteness as a racial signifierProvides an original insight into women's cosmetic practice through an exploration of ingredients, methods and materials used to create cosmetics and the perception of make up in Shakespeare's timeIncludes numerous cosmetic recipes from the early modern period found in printed books and never published in a modern edition
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
1. Defining Beauty in Renaissance Culture
2. Early Modern Cosmetic Culture
3. Cosmetic Restoration in Jacobean Tragedy
4: John Webster and the Culture of Cosmetics
5. Jonson's Cosmetic Ritual
6. Cosmetics and Poetics in Shakespearean Comedy
7. 'Deceived with ornament': Shakespeare's Venice
8. 'Flattering Unction': Cosmetics in Hamlet
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index



