Description
The definitive overview of hair in the Age of Enlightenment, this ground-breaking scholarly work presents 150 years of hair in culture and examines diverse topics such as gender, ethnicity, morality, status, hygiene, eroticism, and belief.
About the Author
Margaret K. Powell is the former W.S. Lewis Librarian and Executive Director of the Lewis Walpole Library, Yale University, USA. Joseph Roach is Sterling Professor of Theater and Professor of English Emeritus at Yale University, USA.
Reviews
A thick, tangled and deliciously idiosyncratic history of hair ... There is plenty to inform and intrigue. * Times Literary Supplement *
These learned and witty essays explore the Enlightenment's obsession with the "social magic" of hair, from celebrity hairdressers to hairy comets, to outlaw hair to the global trade in textiles. Mediator of foundational, philosophical, social, racial, and sexual differences, hair emerges as the catalyst for vividly creative critical encounters with the material past. -- Helen Deutsch, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
This volume invites us into the lively and inventive world of hair in the 18th century, in all of its messy magic and heightened glory. Each essay reveals new ways of seeing and understanding Enlightenment hair-real, artificial, and imagined. -- Chloe Wigston-Smith, University of York, UK
Like a great new cut, A Cultural History of Hair in the Age of Enlightenment allows you to envisage the world differently. Working like master wigmakers, the editors have assembled a star roster of contributors and crafted an elegant collection that braids together the study of sociability, materiality and the body. Rarely have I read a series of essays that so powerfully argues for the centrality of its topic to 18th-century life. -- Daniel O'Quinn, University of Guelph, Canada
Book Information
ISBN 9781350285606
Author Margaret K. Powell
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC