How to Be a Renaissance Woman: The Untold History of Beauty and Female Creativity
Jill Burke. Pegasus, $28.95 (336p) ISBN 978-1-639-36590-6
Art historian Burke (Changing Patrons) takes an eye-opening look at the lives of women during the Italian Renaissance. Arguing that the era experienced the first modern wave of unrealistic beauty standards for women, Burke tracks how an upswell of personal beautification methods was tied to developments in art, especially painting and sculpture’s newly popular classical form (an hourglass shape, distinct from the large-bellied Gothic ideal of the preceding era) and new negative aesthetic connotations for dark hair and skin color and positive ones for whiteness that emerged alongside the sub-Saharan slave trade. However, as Burke makes clear, personal beautification methods could also be used by women as a way to increase their influence, maintain their security, or rebel against conventions. Providing vivid descriptions of the practice and origins of beauty methods, such as body hair removal (popular in Islamic-influenced cultures of southern Europe but also a centerpiece of witch trials, where hair was removed from defendants), and in-depth analyses of the beauty guides and diet books that proliferated in this era, Burke convincingly builds her case that “the celebrated poems, plays, and paintings of the time had profound effects on how real people perceived bodies and beauty” but were also in dialogue with women’s attempts to push back against and manipulate beauty standards. It’s a novel and immersive history. Agent: George Lucas, InkWell Management. (Jan.)
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Reviewed on: 02/05/2024
Genre: Nonfiction
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