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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Elizabeth Currie (Independent Lecturer and Author, UK)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.490kg ISBN: 9781474249768ISBN 10: 1474249760 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 28 July 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgements Notes on the Text Introduction Part 1 Fashioning the Medici Court Chapter 1 The Court on Show Chapter 2 The Rise and Fall of the Florentine Toga Part 2 The Courtier as Consumer Chapter 3 The Noble Art of Shopping Chapter 4 Ruinous Appearances Part 3 Modes of Masculinity Chapter 5 The Versatility of Black Chapter 6 Youth, Fashion, and Desire Chapter 7 Festive Dress Conclusion Notes Bibliography IndexReviews[An] important and illuminating investigation ... Currie profitably mines the rich vein exposed by previous historians of clothing ... [and] makes expert use of contemporary written sources on fashion and etiquette ... [The book offers] so many riches and such careful analysis. Times Literary Supplement This book opens up the wardrobes of elite Florentine families, showing how subtle and sophisticated the choice of dress could be in the sixteenth century. An intelligent, beautifully illustrated and original study, this is essential reading for anyone interested in how clothing made the man during the Renaissance. Highly recommended. Evelyn Welch, Vice-Principal (Arts & Sciences), King's College London, UK This insightful contribution turns a discerning and critical eye towards the clothing of sixteenth-century Florentine men. Currie skillfully explores the ways that clothing made the man within this emphatically sartorially literate society, and shows the rich, fundamental ways that power and identity were invariably negotiated with a material reality on elegantly dressed male bodies. Timothy McCall, Associate Professor of Art History, Villanova University, USA A brilliant analysis of men and the importance of dress in one of early modern Europe's fashion capitals. Readers will discover Florentine elite men as avid sartorialists propelled by their enthusiasm for new possibilities of materials and displays as much as by the intricate political and emotional games dress and accessories allowed them to play. Richly researched, this book represents a milestone in our knowledge of how sixteenth-century men conducted their lives through interacting with things. Ulinka Rublack, Professor of Early Modern European History, University of Cambridge, UK Elizabeth Currie vividly captures the pleasures and perils of engaging with appearances for Florentine men of the sixteenth century. Recent work on the history of clothing has taught us much about sumptuary laws, courtly etiquette, and cultures of consumption in the period. Currie teaches us more, showing how the politics and materials of dress informed the very experience of men's lives, from political posturing in the lucco, through the reputational risks attached to balancing magnificence and sobriety, to the playful freedoms sought in eroticised youthful display and dressing for the homosocial pursuits of sport and carnival. Accessible and scholarly, Fashion and Masculinity in Renaissance Florence is a valuable addition to an expanding literature on sartorial histories. Christopher Breward, Principal, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh, UK Currie's book exemplifies the richness of the life history of materials, in the sense of fabrics made, decorated, and imbued with symbolic value. She brilliantly zeroes on particular public occasions and items of dress in Florence, such as the lucco, to open up the whole range of their political and cultural meanings. -- Ann Rosalind Jones, Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts, USA This book opens up the wardrobes of elite Florentine families, showing how subtle and sophisticated the choice of dress could be in the sixteenth century. An intelligent, beautifully illustrated and original study, this is essential reading for anyone interested in how clothing made the man during the Renaissance. Highly recommended. Evelyn Welch, Vice-Principal (Arts & Sciences), King's College London, UK This insightful contribution turns a discerning and critical eye towards the clothing of sixteenth-century Florentine men. Currie skillfully explores the ways that clothing made the man within this emphatically sartorially literate society, and shows the rich, fundamental ways that power and identity were invariably negotiated with a material reality on elegantly dressed male bodies. Timothy McCall, Associate Professor of Art History, Villanova University, USA A brilliant analysis of men and the importance of dress in one of early modern Europe's fashion capitals. Readers will discover Florentine elite men as avid sartorialists propelled by their enthusiasm for new possibilities of materials and displays as much as by the intricate political and emotional games dress and accessories allowed them to play. Richly researched, this book represents a milestone in our knowledge of how sixteenth-century men conducted their lives through interacting with things. Ulinka Rublack, Professor of Early Modern European History, University of Cambridge, UK Elizabeth Currie vividly captures the pleasures and perils of engaging with appearances for Florentine men of the sixteenth century. Recent work on the history of clothing has taught us much about sumptuary laws, courtly etiquette, and cultures of consumption in the period. Currie teaches us more, showing how the politics and materials of dress informed the very experience of men's lives, from political posturing in the lucco, through the reputational risks attached to balancing magnificence and sobriety, to the playful freedoms sought in eroticised youthful display and dressing for the homosocial pursuits of sport and carnival. Accessible and scholarly, Fashion and Masculinity in Renaissance Florence is a valuable addition to an expanding literature on sartorial histories. Christopher Breward, Principal, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh, UK Currie's book exemplifies the richness of the life history of materials, in the sense of fabrics made, decorated, and imbued with symbolic value. She brilliantly zeroes on particular public occasions and items of dress in Florence, such as the lucco, to open up the whole range of their political and cultural meanings. -- Ann Rosalind Jones, Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts, USA This book opens up the wardrobes of elite Florentine families, showing how subtle and sophisticated the choice of dress could be in the sixteenth century. An intelligent, beautifully-illustrated and original study, this is essential reading for anyone interested in how clothing 'made the man' during the Renaissance. Highly recommended. Evelyn Welch, Vice-Principal (Arts & Sciences), King's College London, UK This insightful contribution turns a discerning and critical eye towards the clothing of sixteenth-century Florentine men. Currie skillfully explores the ways that clothing made the man within this emphatically sartorially-literate society, and shows the rich, fundamental ways that power and identity were invariably negotiated with a material reality on elegantly dressed male bodies. Timothy McCall, Associate Professor of Art History, Villanova University, US This book opens up the wardrobes of elite Florentine families, showing how subtle and sophisticated the choice of dress could be in the sixteenth century. An intelligent, beautifully-illustrated and original study, this is essential reading for anyone interested in how clothing 'made the man' during the Renaissance. Highly recommended. Evelyn Welch, Vice-Principal (Arts & Sciences), King's College London, UK This insightful contribution turns a discerning and critical eye towards the clothing of sixteenth-century Florentine men. Currie skillfully explores the ways that clothing made the man within this emphatically sartorially-literate society, and shows the rich, fundamental ways that power and identity were invariably negotiated with a material reality on elegantly dressed male bodies. Timothy McCall, Associate Professor of Art History, Villanova University, US A brilliant analysis of men and the importance of dress in one of early modern Europe's fashion capitals. Readers will discover Florentine elite men as avid sartorialists propelled by their enthusiasm for new possibilities of materials and displays as much as by the intricate political and emotional games dress and accessories allowed them to play. Richly researched, this book represents a milestone in our knowledge of how sixteenth-century men conducted their lives through interacting with things. Ulinka Rublack, Professor of Early Modern European History, University of Cambridge, UK Elizabeth Currie vividly captures the pleasures and perils of engaging with appearances for Florentine men of the sixteenth century. Recent work on the history of clothing has taught us much about sumptuary laws, courtly etiquette, and cultures of consumption in the period. Currie teaches us more, showing how the politics and materials of dress informed the very experience of men's lives, from political posturing in the lucco, through the reputational risks attached to balancing magnificence and sobriety, to the playful freedoms sought in eroticised youthful display and dressing for the homosocial pursuits of sport and carnival. Accessible and scholarly, Fashion and Masculinity in Renaissance Florence is a valuable addition to an expanding literature on sartorial histories. Christopher Breward, Principal, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh, UK Author InformationElizabeth Currie is a lecturer and author specialising in the history of fashion and textiles. She was formerly a Research Fellow and Tutor in the History of Design at the Royal College of Art, UK and an Assistant Curator in the Furniture, Textiles and Fashion Department at the Victoria and Albert Museum, UK. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |