Medieval Institute Publications
The Corporeality of Clothing in Medieval Literature
About this book

Every known society wears some form of clothing. It is central to how we experience our bodies and how we understand the sociocultural dimensions of our embodiment. It is also central to how we understand works of literature. In this innovative study, Brazil demonstrates how medieval writers use clothing to direct readers’ and spectators’ awareness to forms of embodiment. Offering insights into how poetic works, plays, and devotional treatises target readers’ kinesic intelligence—their ability to understand movements and gestures—Brazil demonstrates the theological implications of clothing, often evinced by how garments limit or facilitate the movements and postures of bodies in narratives. By bringing recent studies in the field of embodied cognition to bear on narrated and dramatized interactions between dress and body, this book offers new methodological tools to the study of clothing.
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Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
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Abbreviations
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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Introduction
1 -
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1. Clothing and the Fallen Body
19 -
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2. Graveclothes and Resurrection From Gospel to Stage
53 -
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3. Coming Forth, Still Bound Raising Lazarus in Theology and Performance
89 -
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4. Metaphorical Shoes and the Body
119 -
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Conclusion
147 -
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Bibliography
151 -
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Index
167
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