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"How were male bodies viewed before the Enlightenment? And what does this reveal about attitudes towards sex and gender in premodern Europe? This richly textured cultural history investigates the characterization of the sex of adult male bodies from ancient Greece to the seventeenth century. Before the modern focus on the phallic, penetrative qualities of male anatomy, Patricia Simons finds that men's bodies were considered in terms of their active physiological characteristics, in relation to semen, testicles and what was considered innately masculine heat. Re-orienting attention from an anatomical to a physiological focus, and from fertility to pleasure, Simons argues that women's sexual agency was perceived in terms of active reception of the valuable male seed. This provocative, compelling study draws on visual, material and textual evidence to elucidate a broad range of material, from medical learning, high art and literary metaphors to obscene badges, codpieces and pictorial or oral jokes"--
"While testicles were key signs of the male body and the penis was essential for emission, those markers had to work in conjunction with performative cues, such as standing erect while urinating, growing beards and discharging a certain kind of semen. Some of the most important behavioural signs of the gender of masculinity were thus tied to the biologically sexed male body, and the latter is the focus here. Mutually constitutive, gender and sex were brought into being by anatomy and physiology, and also by actions, as well as being construed through images and words. The Welsh schoolmaster John Owen (d. 1622) neatly encapsulated logocentric virility in his epigram: "God himself is the Word; he made all things with a word. / We men make words; we too are words." Masculinity was an inter-related and variable mix of three main factors: genital signs, somatic deeds (like the mode of pissing), and behavioural indicators (such as choice of dress, and degree of aggressiveness). Case studies examined in this chapter demonstrate the range but not the instability of early modern parameters within which maleness was designated and enacted"--
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Subjects
Sexual behavior, Social aspects, Men, HISTORY / Europe / General, Male Generative organs, Sex role, Symbolic aspects, Human body, Physiology, History, Human body, social aspects, Men, sexual behavior, Generative organs, male, Kultur, Körper, Mann, Sexualverhalten, Human body--social aspects, Human body--symbolic aspects, Men--physiology, Men--sexual behavior, Sex role--history, Generative organs, male--social aspects, Generative organs, male--history, Gender identity--history, Genitalia, male--history, Human body--history, Sexual behavior--history, Physiology--history, Gn298 .s54 2011, 305.31, His010000Showing 2 featured editions. View all 2 editions?
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The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe: A Cultural History
Jan 23, 2014, Cambridge University Press
paperback
1107656877 9781107656871
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The sex of men in premodern Europe: a cultural history
2011, Cambridge University Press
in English
1107004918 9781107004917
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Source title: The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe: A Cultural History (Cambridge Social and Cultural Histories)
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