O'Kell, Hayley Jane ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0007-0466-6474 (2023) A Woman’s Worth: Liminality, Litigiousness, and Luxury in the Early Modern Iberian Atlantic World. PhD thesis, University of Leeds.
Abstract
After 1492, the Iberian woman was directly impacted by shifting frontiers; her life, family and identity were often dynamically split across the Atlantic Ocean. With the expansion of the Spanish Empire, the early modern Iberian woman similarly pushed at the boundaries of her body and contested her spatial occupation of society. This woman sent letters to her relatives in the colonies, used “New World” products in her beauty regime and wore newly acquired dyes, fabrics, and jewels from across the Atlantic. She could also file her own will, used to bequeath these new commodities, and in some cases, pursue a lawsuit against those perceived to have infringed against her property. Moving away from concerns with the aristocracy that has dominated early modern Iberian scholarship in recent years, this thesis uses literature, poetry, theatre, painting, letters, judicial lawsuits, and wills, among other sources, to garner a holistic understanding of what was at stake for the proto-bourgeois Iberian woman. In essence, by taking control of their bodies (that is to say, their appearance and their means of communication), proto-bourgeois Iberian women had a very particular kind of agency that only they shared and truly understood as a collective unit. Such a corporeal focus on the early modern Iberian woman will reveal hidden narratives of beauty, commodities, fashion, and law in the Atlantic realm.
Metadata
Supervisors: | Wheeler, Duncan and Jarman, Rebecca and Brown-Grant, Rosalind |
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Keywords: | Early modern Iberian Atlantic; Early modern women; Spanish women; Iberian women; Female agency; Beauty regimes; Wills and last testaments; Lawsuits; Financial claims; Clothing; Women and authority; Renaissance; Golden Age Spain; Baroque Spain; Spanish prose; Spanish satire; Spanish theatre; Spanish poetry; New World; Women and Community; Female Autonomy; Female Solidarity; Bourgeois women; Marginalisation of women; Women and family units; Female camaraderie; Female community; Economic Agency; Financial Agency; Death in Early Modern Spain; Testaments and Wills; Clay-eating; Carmine; Renaissance cosmetics |
Awarding institution: | University of Leeds |
Academic Units: | The University of Leeds > Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Cultures (Leeds) > School of Languages Cultures and Societies (Leeds) > Spanish & Portuguese (Leeds) |
Depositing User: | Miss Hayley Jane O'Kell |
Date Deposited: | 18 Mar 2024 16:30 |
Last Modified: | 18 Mar 2024 16:30 |
Open Archives Initiative ID (OAI ID): | oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:34479 |
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