Gender and Materiality in Early Modern English Gloves

J Daybell, N Svante, B Susan, VG Jacqueline, A Nadine

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Abstract

This article explores the complex interactions of gender with the materiality of the processes of becoming and being a glove in the early modern period. Through an investigation of gloves, glove parts, and their ephemeral presentation (through leather, embroidery, and perfume), we argue that gender and materiality act in dialogic ways to produce power relations, and that considerations of gender, power, and materiality are central to our understanding of how material things function in a given society, embedded in social practices and cultural processes of production, consumption, and exchange. Using the glove as an indicative point of exploration, the article offers a new gendered interpretative methodology for analyzing other material artifacts (such as shoes, rings, porcelain, or books) in an early modern European context across their many itineraries from commission to conservation. As such, it critiques and complements traditional “object biography” approaches to things.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)571-606
Number of pages0
JournalSixteenth Century Journal: journal of early modern studies
Volume52
Issue number3
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2021

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