Shopping Cart
University Of California Press
Browse
Search
Cover Image
California eNews

History titles
eMail:

Sara Melzer and Kathryn Norberg, editors

From the Royal to the Republican Body

Incorporating the Political in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century France

Buy Paperback
$29.95, £21.95 paperback
978-0-520-20807-0
Available Now
286 pages, 18 b/w photographs, 5 musical examples
July 1998, Available worldwide
Categories: History; European History; French Studies; European Literature; Cinema & Performance Arts; Politics

Free online edition (eScholarship)--available only to University of California faculty, staff, and students (List of public titles)
"[An] exciting account of cultural identities and politics."—European Studies
In this innovative volume, leading scholars examine the role of the body as a primary site of political signification in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century France. Some essays focus on the sacralization of the king's body through a gendered textual and visual rhetoric. Others show how the monarchy mastered subjects' minds by disciplining the body through dance, music, drama, art, and social rituals. The last essays in the volume focus on the unmaking of the king's body and the substitution of a new, republican body. Throughout, the authors explore how race and gender shaped the body politic under the Bourbons and during the Revolution. This compelling study expands our conception of state power and demonstrates that seemingly apolitical activities like the performing arts, dress and ritual, contribute to the state's hegemony. From the Royal to the Republican Body will be an essential resource for students and scholars of history, literature, music, dance and performance studies, gender studies, art history, and political theory.
Sara E. Melzer is Associate Professor of French at the University of California, Los Angeles, author of Discourses of the Fall: A Study of Pascal's Pensées (California, 1986), and coeditor (with Leslie W. Rabine) of Rebel Daughters: Women and the French Revolution (1992). Kathryn Norberg is an Associate Professor at UCLA and former Director of the UCLA Center for the Study of Women. She has coedited (with Philip T. Hoffman) Fiscal Crises, Liberty, and Representative Government, 1450-1789 (1994) and is the author of Rich and Poor in Grenoble, 1600-1814 (California, 1985).