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WAGS 6 /Art and Art History 84 Nicola Courtright

Spring 2008 My office: Fayerweather 206


M/W 12:30-1:50 Office Hours: T/Th 2:00-3:00 & by appointment
Class: Fayerweather 217

WOMEN AND ART IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE


SYLLABUS
DESCRIPTION

This course will examine the ways in which prevailing ideas about women and gender shaped visual
imagery, and how these images, in turn, influenced ideas concerning women from the Renaissance to the
Enlightenment. It will adopt a comparative perspective, both by identifying regional differences among
European nations and tracing changes over time. In addition to considering patronage of art by women
and works by women artists, we will look at the depiction of women heroes such as Judith; the portrayal
of women rulers, including Elizabeth I and Marie de' Medici; and the imagery of rape. Topics emerging
from these categories of art include biological theories about women; humanist defenses of women; the
relationship between the exercise of political power and sexuality; differing attitudes toward women in
Catholic and Protestant art; and feminine ideals of beauty.

GOALS FOR LEARNING

Gain an understanding about how historical attitudes about women and by women affect art made
about and by women;
Develop an analytical ability to examine deeply into points of view expressed in texts and art of a
historical period other than our own and to distinguish them from another;
Find ways of learning collaboratively with classmates;
Develop and argue an original thesis in an extended research paper.

CLASS MEETINGS

Attendance is extremely important, for the substance of this course is in material introduced in the
classroom, not in a textbook. Your grade will depend in part upon your participation in class.

READING

The following books may be purchased at the Jeffery Amherst bookstore:

*Whitney Chadwick, Women, Art and Society (Thames and Hudson, 1990)
*Agnolo Firenzuola, On the Beauty of Women (Pennsylvania, 1992)
*Merry E. Wiesner, Women and Gender in Early Modern Europe (Cambridge, 1993)

None of these contains a real survey of the course material, so we are going to have to make one
up as we go along. To this end, I have placed a variety of required readings (labeled Reading on the
syllabus) on electronic reserve in Frost Library. They, along with visual imagery placed in juxtaposition
with them on a daily basis, will form the basis of class discussion and essays. The section entitled Other
Bibliography contains useful background reading, and provides sources for your research papers. Some
of these books are on reserve.

1
EXAMS -- NONE!

COURSE FORMAT AND ASSIGNMENTS

In the first half of the semester you will be developing critical skills through discussion and analysis of
texts and art. (All assignments and course documents will be posted on our web portals under My
Academics, then Women and Art in Early Modern Europe.)

The assignments that will help you achieve this goal are:

*Ungraded weekly responses. Either brief visual analyses of works of art or responses to the readings
will be due every week or so for posting on Blackboard. You may employ any style you like that helps
you to delve more deeply into the issues. I don't grade them or comment upon them individually because
I wish you to 1) find what interests you in the material -- if anything -- and not try to figure out what I
want you to think and 2) deal in an unconstrained fashion with unfamiliar ideas. I do want you to perform
this exercise, however, so your overall grade will suffer if you do not hand each one in. After you post
them, we will discuss issues emerging from them in class.

*Short, graded papers. Two analyses that relate a work of art to a particular issue emerging from the
readings and discussion. I would like you show all first drafts to someone at the Writing Center. (3 typed
pp., one due Week 3 and the other Week 7.) All papers must be typed, stapled, and handed in on time.

Week 3 --First graded analysis (due Friday Feb. 13)


Through observation of elements of form, write about a work of art in the Mead Art Museum representing
a female saint or another woman in a religious context and consider how the artist conveys an idea about
women and spirituality through the use of forms. (See Considerations for a Formal Analysis.) Be sure
to:
Organize your paper so that it follows a continuous argument;
Use visual evidence to make your points;
Write at least 2 versions, taking the first to the Writing Center.
In the second half of the semester you will research and write a paper featuring an original idea (10
pp.) The week-by-week assignments will help you to identify an original idea, do research on your topic,
and develop an argument through sequential writing assignments. You will still have regular ungraded
responses to the readings.

Week 4: NO CLASS Wed., Feb. 20

Week 6 (March 3-5)


Read Diane Owen Hughes, "Sumptuary Law and Social Relations in Renaissance Italy," or Christiane
Klapisch-Zuber, "The Griselda Complex: Dowry and Marriage Gifts in the Quattrocento," and
analyze the way either writer sets up and makes an argument. In a few sentences, write:

1) What does the author do in the first paragraph and in the second paragraph? Where does she say
what other scholars have done and what she is preparing to do?

2) What is some of the main evidence she uses to make her point?

3) What is her conclusion? Where does she place it?

2
Week 7 (March 10-12)
1) Pick a work of art for your research paper and begin your research (see First Set of Steps toward
a Research Paper). Hand in paper telling me which work of art youve chosen.

2) Second graded analysis (due Friday, March 14)


Through observation of elements of form, write about a work of art in the Mead Art Museum representing
a woman portrait, domestic scene, or other and consider how the artist conveys an idea about women
and her place in society through the use of forms. (See Considerations for a Formal Analysis.) Be
sure to:
Organize your paper so that it follows a continuous argument;
Use visual evidence to make your points;
Write at least 2 versions, taking the first to the Writing Center.

SPRING BREAK Get plenty of rest and go see some art!

Week 8 (March 24-26) Write and hand in:

1) a page summarizing the usefulness of 3 articles and/or books youve located for your research (First
Set of Steps); and

2) a page analyzing the best article on the subject of your research paper in the same manner you did for
the article by Hughes or Klapisch-Zuber (see above, Week 6).

Week 9 (March 31-April 2)


--Collect a group of related works of art and write a paragraph on their similarities and differences (see
Second Set of Steps toward a Research Paper.)

Week 10 (April 7-9)


-- Figure out a problem that your topic presents and hand in a paper stating what it is, and positing a
hypothesis for a solution (see Third Set of Steps toward a Research Paper.)

--Hand in an annotated bibliography.

--Come see Prof. Courtright with illustrations and talk about your problem/hypothesis.

Week 11 (April 14-16)


--First version of research paper due Wed. April 23 (see Fourth Set of Steps toward a Research
Paper.)
1) Write your rough draft.
2) Write a descriptive outline (see Descriptive Outlines as a Tool for Revision.)
3) Revise your draft.

Week 12 (April 21-23)


-- Meet with me to discuss your revised first version of your paper.
--Do more research and re-write (see Fifth Set of Steps toward a Research Paper.)
-- Go to Writing Center, re-write again.

Week 13. (April 28-30)


-- Final version of research paper due Friday, May 2.

3
TOPICS
Week 1-2

1. FIRST PRINCIPLES

Art as documentary evidence


Art history and feminism
Biology as destiny
Gender, sexuality

Reading
Primary sources
*Aristotle, De generatione animalium, Bk. 1. ch. 2. (716a-b), trans. D.M. Balme (NY: Oxford UP, 1992),
pp. 21-24, 127-34

Secondary material
*MacLean, Ian. The Renaissance Notion of Woman (Cambridge, 1980), Chap. 3, pp. 28-46
*Rabb, T.K. and Jonathan Brown, "Introduction," in The Evidence of Art: Images and Meaning in
History, ed. Robert I. Rotberg and T.K. Rabb (Cambridge, 1988), pp. 1-6
*Gouma-Peterson, T. and P. Mathews, "The Feminist Critique of Art History," Art Bulletin, 69 (Sept.
1987), pp. 326-57 [online-JStor]
*Wiesner, M. Women and Gender in Early Modern Europe, Introduction

Other Bibliography
Aris, Philippe, ed. A History of Sexuality, trans. Anthony Forster (Oxford: Blackwell, 1985)
Crawford, Katherine. European Sexualities, 1400-1800 (Cambridge: Cambridge U, 2007)
Davis, Natalie Zemon and Arlette Farge, Renaissance and Enlightenment Paradoxes (A History of
Women in the West, vol. 3) (Cambridge: Harvard, 1997)
Gilman, Sander. Sexuality: an Illustrated History (New York, 1989).
Laqueur, Thomas. Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud (Cambridge, 1990)
Muir, Edward and Guido Ruggiero, eds., Sex and Gender in Historical Perspective (Baltimore, 1990)
Simons, Patricia, Gender and Sexuality in Renaissance and Baroque Italy: A Working Bibliography
(Sydney, 1988)
Tuana, Nancy. The Less Noble Sex: Scientific, Religious, and Philosophical Conceptions of Woman's
Nature (Indiana, 1993)
Turner, James G., ed. Sexuality and Gender in Early Modern Europe: Institutions, Texts, Images
(Cambridge, 1993).

Week 2-3

2. WOMEN AND CHRISTIANITY: THE MEDIEVAL HERITAGE AND ITS


TRANSFORMATION

Eve
Mary, mother and virgin
Early Christian saints: Mary Magdalene -- Donatello, Caravaggio, Lanfranco
Nuns and mystical union with Christ -- Bernini, Lanfranco

Reading
Primary sources

4
*Genesis 1, 2
*Teresa of Avila, in Irving Lavin, Bernini and the Unity of the Visual Arts (Oxford, 1981), p. 107

Secondary material
*Bynum, Caroline Walker. The Female Body and Religious Practice in the Later Middle Ages,
in: Fragmentation and Redemption: Essay on Gender and the Human Body in Medieval Religion
(NY: Zone Books, 1991), pp. 181-238
*Chadwick, Women, Art and Society, ch. 1-2
*Miles, Margaret. Image as Insight (Boston: Beacon Press, 1985), Intro., pp. 1-13
*Monter, William. "Protestant Wives, Catholic Saints, and the Devil's Handmaid: Women in the Age of
Reformations," in Becoming Visible, ed. R. Bridenthal et al. (Boston: Houghton, 1987), pp.
203-219
*Wiesner, Mary. Women and Gender in Early Modern Europe, Ch. 6

Other Bibliography
Bell, Rudolph M. and Donald Weinstein, Saints and Society: The Two Worlds of Western Christendom,
1000-1700 (Chicago, 1982)
[Bokenham, Osbern.] A Legend of Holy Women, trans. Sheila Delany (Notre Dame, 1992).
Brown, Peter. The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity
(Columbia, 1988)
Bynum, Caroline Walker. Fragmentation and Redemption: Essay on Gender and the Human Body in
Medieval Religion (NY: Zone Books, 1991)
Bynum, Caroline Walker. Holy Feast and Holy Fast: The Religious Significance of Food to Medieval
Women (Berkeley: U Cal Press, 1987)
Johnson, Penelope. Equal in Monastic Profession. Chicago, 1991.
Malvern, Marjorie. Venus in Sackcloth: The Magdalen's Origins and Metamorphoses (Carbondale and
Edwardsville, IL, 1975)
Matter, E. Ann. "The Personal and the Paradigm: The Book of Maria Domitilla Galluzzi," in
The Crannied Wall: Women, Religion, and the Arts in Early Modern Europe, ed. Craig Monson
(U. Michigan, 1992), pp. 87-103
McLaughlin, Megan. "Gender Paradox and the Otherness of God," Gender and History, 31 (1991), pp.
147-59
Miles, Margaret. Carnal Knowing: Female Nakedness and Religious Meaning in the Christian West
(Boston: Beacon Press, 1989)
Or Mooney, Catherine, ed. Gendered Voices: Medieval Saints and their Interpreters (Phil: U Penn,
1999).
Russell, H. Diane. Eva/Ave: Woman in Renaissance and Baroque Prints (Washington: Nat. Gallery of
Art, 1990)
Schulenberg, Jane Tibbetts. "Female Sanctity: Public and Private Roles, ca. 500-1100," in Women and
Power in the Middle Ages (Athens: U. Georgia, 1988), pp. 102-25
Valone, Carolyn. "Roman Matrons as Patrons: Various Views of the Cloister Wall," in The Crannied
Wall: Women, Religion, and the Arts in Early Modern Europe, ed. Craig Monson (U. Michigan,
1992), pp. 49-72
Warner, Marina. Alone of All Her Sex: The Myth and Cult of the Virgin Mary (NY: Vintage, Random
House, 1983)

5
Week 4

3. THE POWER OF WOMEN

Sexual inversion
Witches
Female heroes

Reading
Primary sources
*Boccaccio, De mulieribus claris/Famous Women, trans. Virginia Brown (Cambridge: Harvard
UP, 1991), pp. 3-7 (Dedication), 159-63 (Penelope), 167-81 (Dido), 193-5 (Sappho), 233-
43 (Artemisia), 361-73 (Cleopatra), 467-73 (Joanna, queen)
Secondary material
*Garrard, Artemisia Gentileschi, Chap. 2: "Historical Feminism and Female Iconography," pp. 141-179
*Wiesner, Women and Gender, Ch. 7

Other Bibliography
Buettner, Brigitte. Boccaccios Des cleres et nobles femmes : Systems of Signification in an Illuminated
Manuscript (Seattle: U Wash P, 1996)
Burns, Norman T. and Christopher J. Reagan, eds., Concepts of the Hero in the Middle Ages and the
Renaissance (Albany, 1975)
Cohn, Samuel K., Jr. Women in the Streets: Essays on Sex and Power in Renaissance Italy
(Baltimore,1996)
Hults, Linda. The Witch as Muse: Art, Gender and Power in Early Modern Europe (Phil: U Penn P,
2005)
Jordan, Constance. "Boccaccio's In-Famous Women: Gender and Civic Virtue in the De Mulieribus
Claris,@ in Ambiguous Realities: Women in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, ed. Carole Levin
and Jeanie Watson (Detroit: Wayne State U., 1987), pp. 25-47
Mullins, Edwin B. The Painted Witch: How Western Artists Have Viewed the Sexuality of Women (New
York, 1985)
Smith, Susan L. The Power of Women: A Topos in Medieval Art and Literature (Philadelphia, 1995).

Week 5-6

4. IDEALS OF BEAUTY AND NATURE: PORTRAITURE, NUDES

Portraits and proportion


Renaissance vs. Baroque nude -- Raphael, Titian, Gentileschi, Rembrandt

Reading
Primary sources
*Agnolo Firenzuola, On the Beauty of Women (1548) (Penn., 1992)

Secondary material
*Elizabeth Cropper, "The Beauty of Woman: Problems in the Rhetoric of Renaissance Portraiture," in
Rewriting the Renaissance, ed. M.W. Ferguson et al. (Chicago, 1986), pp. 175-190
*Jones, Ann R. and Peter Stallybrass. Renaissance Clothing and the Material of Memory (Cambridge:
Cambridge U P, 2000), ch. 2 Composing the Subject: Making Portraits, pp. 34-58
*Sohm, Philip. AGendered Style in Italian Art Criticism from Michelangelo to Malvasia.@ Renaissance

6
Quarterly 48 (1995), 759-808.

Other Bibliography
Clark, Kenneth. The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (NY: Doubleday, 1956)
Duby, Georges, ed. Power and Beauty: Images of Women in Art (London, 1992)
Rogers, Mary. "The Decorum of Women's Beauty: Trissino, Firenzuola, Luigini and the Representation
of Women in Sixteenth-Century Painting," Oxford Art Journal, 2, 1988, pp. 47-87
Rosenthal, Margaret F. The Honest Courtesan: Veronica Franco, Citizen and Writer in Sixteenth-Century
Venice. Chicago, 1992
Saunders, Gill. The Nude: A New Perspective (London: Harper and Row, 1989)
Talvacchia, Bette. Taking Positions: On the Erotic in Renaissance Culture (Princeton: Princeton UP,
1999)

7
Week 7-9

5. EARLY MODERN WOMEN: PUBLIC AND PRIVATE IN ITALY

Status of women in early modern societies


Italian Renaissance portraits, single and conjugal
Court lady, court imagery in Italy

Reading
Primary material
*Castiglione, The Book of the Courtier, Book 3, trans. Charles Singleton (Doubleday, 1959), pp.
201-82
*Christine de Pisan. A Medieval Womans Mirror of Honor: The Treasury of the City of Ladies,
trans.
Charity Willard (Tenafly: Persea/Bard Press, 1989), Bk. 1, ch.18-22 (pp. 113-21), Bk. 2,
ch. 10-13 (pp. 170-83), Bk. 3, ch. 1-9 (pp. 185-214)
*Isabella d'Este, selected letters, from Julia Cartwright, Isabella d=Este (London, 1903)

Secondary sources
*Davis, Natalie Z. Society and Culture in Early Modern France (Stanford, 1975), Women on
Top, pp.
124-151
*Hughes, Diane Owen. "Sumptuary Law and Social Relations in Renaissance Italy," in Disputes
and Settlements, ed. John Bossy (Cambridge, 1983), pp. 69-99
*Klapisch-Zuber, Christiane. "The Griselda Complex: Dowry and Marriage Gifts in the
Quattrocento," in her Women, Family, and Ritual in Renaissance Italy, trans. Lydia
Cochrane (Chicago, 1985), pp. 213-47.
*Jordan, Constance. "Feminism and the Humanists: The Case for Sir Thomas Elyot's Defense of
Good Women," in Rewriting the Renaissance, ed. M.W. Ferguson et al. (Chicago, 1986),
pp. 242-58
*Wiesner, Women and Gender, Ch. 1-4

Other Bibliography
WOMENS PLACE IN EARLY MODERN SOCIETY
Burckhardt, Jakob. The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy (Oxford, 1937)
Cereta, Laura. Collected Letters of the Renaissance Feminist, trans. and ed. by Diana Robin
(Chicago, U
Chicago P, 1997)
Goffen, Rona. Titian's Women (New Haven: Yale, 1997)
Kelly, Joan. "Early Feminist Theory and the Querelle des Femmes, 1400-1789," in her Women,
History, and Theory (Chicago, 1984), pp. 65-109
Kelly, Joan. "Did Women Have a Renaissance?," in Becoming Visible, ed. R. Bridenthal et al.
(Boston: Houghton, 1987), pp. 175-201
Kelso, Ruth, Doctrine for the Lady of the Renaissance (Urbana: U. Ill., 1956)
Migiel, Marilyn and Juliana Schiesari, eds., Refiguring Women: Perspectives on Gender and the
Italian Renaissance (Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1991)
Schurman, Anna Maria von. Whether a Christian Woman Should Be Educated and Other Writings
from her Intellectual Circle, ed. Joyce L. Irwin (Chicago, 1998)
Simons, Patricia. "(Check)mating the Grand Masters: The Gendered Sexualized Politics of
Chess in Renaissance Italy," Oxford Art Journal 16 (1993): 59-74
Tinagli, Paola. Women in Italian Renaissance Art: Gender, Representation, Identity (Manchester
and NY, 1997)
Wiesner, Merry. "Women's Defense of Their Public Role," in Women in the Middle Ages and the
Renaissance, ed. M.B. Rose (Syracuse, 1986), pp. 1-27

FAMILY
Alberti, Leon Battista. Della famiglia/The Family in Renaissance Florence, trans. R. Watkins
(Columbia:
U. So. Carolina P, 1969)
Aris, Philippe. Centuries of Childhood: A Social History of Family Life (NY: Vintage, 1962)
Aris, P. and Georges Duby, eds. A History of Private Life, 5 vols. (Cambridge: Harvard, 1987)
Goody, Jack. The Development of the Family and Marriage in Europe (Cambr: Cambridge UP,
1983)
Ozment, Steven. When Fathers Ruled: Family Life in Reformation Europe (Cambridge: Harvard,
1983)

MARRIAGE
Barbaro, Francesco. "On Wifely Duties," in The Earthly Republic: Italian Humanists on
Government and Society, ed. B. Kohl and R.G. Witt, (Philadelphia, U.Penn Press, 1978)
pp. 177-228
Baskins, Cristelle. Cassone Painting, Humanism and Gender in Early Modern Italy (Cambridge:
Cambridge UP, 1998)
Benson, Pamela Joseph. The Invention of the Renaissance Woman (Penn State U., 1992)
Bestor, Jane Fair. Marriage Transactions in Renaissance Italy and Mausss Essay on the Gift,
Past and Present 164 (Aug., 1999), pp. 6-46
Christiansen, Keith. "Lorenzo Lotto and the Tradition of Epithalamic Paintings," Apollo, 124,
1986, pp. 166-73
Duby, Georges. Love and Marriage in the Middle Ages (Chicago, 1994)
Hughes, Diane Owen. From Brideprice to Dowry in Mediterranean Europe, Journal of Family
History 3, 3 (1978), 262-96
King, Catherine, "Medieval and Renaissance Matrons, Italian-Style," Zeitschrift fr
Kunstgeschichte 55 (1992): 372-93
Sperling, Jutta. Dowry Or Inheritance? Kinship, Property, and Womens Agency In Lisbon,
Venice, and Florence (1572), Journal of Early Modern History 11,3 (2007):197-238
[online at www.brill.nl/jemh]

CHILDBIRTH
Musacchio, Jacqueline. The Art and Ritual of Childbirth in Renaissance Italy (Yale UP: 1999)

PORTRAITURE
Campbell, Lorne. Renaissance Portraits: European Portrait-Painting in the 14th, 15th, and 16th
Centuries (Yale, 1990)
Hughes, Diane Owen. Representing the Family: Portraits and Purposes in Early Modern Italy,
in Robert Rotberg and T.K. Rabb, eds., Art and History: Images and their Meaning
(Cambr: Cambr. UP, 1988), pp. 7-38
Simons, Patricia. "Women in Frames: The Gaze, the Eye, the Profile in Renaissance Portraiture,"
in The Expanding Discourse, ed. N. Broude and M. Garrard (NY: Harper Collins, 1992),
pp. 38-57.

Week 10
6. ELEVATION OF THE WOMAN'S TRADITIONAL REALM: DUTCH DOMESTIC
IMAGERY

Dutch and Flemish family portraits


Dutch domestic imagery

Reading
Primary sources
*Geertruydt Roghman, A Woman Cleaning, engraving, Mead Art Museum [AC 1997.6]

Secondary material
*Peacock, Martha Moffitt. Domesticity in the Public Sphere, in: Saints, Sinners and Sisters, ed.
Jane L. Carroll and Alison G. Stewart (Ashgate, 2003), pp. 44-68
*Simon Schama, The Embarrassment of Riches (New York: Knopf, 1987), Chap. 6: "Hussies
and Housewives"

Other Bibliography
Bedaux, Jan Baptist. The Reality of Symbols: Studies in the Iconology of Netherlandish Art,
1400-1800 (Hague: Gary Schwartz, 1990)
Franits, Wayne. Paragons of Virtue: Women and Domesticity in 17th-Century Dutch Art
(Cambridge, 1993)
Peacock, Martha Moffitt. Harpies and Henpecked Husbands: Images of the Powerful Housewife
in Netherlandish Art (Ann Arbor: UMichigan P, 1989)
Smith, David. Masks of Wedlock: Seventeenth-Century Dutch Marriage Portraiture (Ann Arbor:
UMI Research Press, 1982)

Week 11

7. WOMEN RULERS: REGENTS AND QUEENS

Elizabeth I of England
Catherine de Medici and Marie de' Medici of France

Reading
Primary sources
*Elizabeth, I, On Marriage, and The Golden Speech, in The Longman Anthology of British
Literature, 2nd ed., vol. 1B, ed. Constance Jordan and Clare Carroll (New York: Longman,
2003)
*Marie de Medici, to be handed out

Secondary material
*Levin, Carole. "John Foxe and the Responsibilities of Queenship," in Women in the Middle
Ages and the Renaissance, ed. M.B. Rose (Syracuse, 1986), pp. 113-29
*ffolliott, Sheila. "Catherine de' Medici as Artemisia: Figuring the Powerful Widow," in
Rewriting the Renaissance, ed. Margaret W. Ferguson et al. (Chicago, 1986), pp. 227-4,
370-76

Other Bibliography
Axton, Marie. The Queen's Two Bodies: Drama and the Elizabethan Succession. London, 1977.
Crawford, Katherine. Perilous Performances: Gender and Regency in Early Modern France
(Cambridge:
Harvard U Press, 2004)
Hackett, Helen. Virgin Mother, Maiden Queen: Elizabeth I and the Cult of the Virgin Mary
(New York, 1996)
Jordan, Constance. Renaissance Feminism: Literary Texts and Political Models. Ithaca, 1990.
Levin, Carole. The Heart and Stomach of a King: Elizabeth I and the Politics of Sex and
Power (Philadelphia: U. Penn, 1994)
Levin, Carole. "Power, Politics, and Sexuality: Images of Elizabeth I," in The Politics of Gender
in Early Modern Europe, ed. J.R. Brink et al. (Kirksville, Mo., 1989), pp. 95-110
Levin, C. and P.A. Sullivan, eds. Political Rhetoric, Power, and Renaissance Women (Albany:
SUNY Press, 1995)
Marrow,D. The Art Patronage of Marie de'Medici (Ann Arbor, 1982)
Millen, R.F. and R.E. Wolf, Heroic Deeds and Mystic Figures: A New Reading of Rubens' Life
of Maria de'Medici (Princeton, 1989)
Saward, Susan. The Golden Age of Marie de'Medici (Ann Arbor, 1982)
Strong, Roy. The Cult of Elizabeth (Berkeley, 1986)
Strong, Roy. Gloriana: The Portraits of Queen Elizabeth I (New York, 1987)
Thuillier, Jacques and Jacques Foucart. Rubens' Life of Marie de' Medici (New York, 1967)
Weil, Rachel. "The Crown has Fallen to the Distaff: Gender and Politics in the Age of Catherine
de Medici, 1560-1589," Critical Matrix, I (1985), pp. 1-38
Yates, Frances. Astraea: The Imperial Theme in the Sixteenth Century (London, 1975)

Week 12

8. RAPE

Titian, Rubens, Gentileschi

Reading
Primary sources
*Rape trial of Artemisia Gentileschi, in Mary Garrard, Artemisia Gentileschi (1989), pp. 410-87

Secondary material
*Carroll, Margaret. "The Erotics of Absolutism: Rubens and the Mystification of Sexual
Violence," Representations, 25 (1989), pp. 3-30 [onlinee-journal]

Other Bibliography
Tomaselli, S. and R. Porter. Rape, ed. S. (Oxford, 1986)
Donaldson, Ian. The Rapes of Lucretia: A Myth and its Transformations (Oxford, 1982)
Jed, Stephanie. Chaste Thinking: The Rape of Lucretia and the Birth of Humanism
(Bloomington, IN, 1989)
Higgins, Lynn A. and Brenda R. Silver, eds. Rape and Representation (Columbia U. Press, 1991)
Saslow, James. Ganymede in the Renaissance: Homosexuality in Art and Society (New Haven,
1986).

Week 12-13

9. WOMEN ARTISTS, 15TH-17TH CENTURIES


Italian Rnss. and Bque.: Sophonisba Anguissola, Lavinia Fontana, Artemisia Gentileschi
Dutch 17th c.: Judith Leyster, Clara Peeters

Reading
Primary sources

Secondary material
*Chadwick, Women, Art and Society, Introduction, Ch. 3-4.
*Jones, Ann R. and Peter Stallybrass. Renaissance Clothes and the Materials of Memory
(Cambridge:
Cambridge UP, 2000), Ch. 6, The needle and the pen, pp. 134-71
*Nochlin, Linda. "Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?," in Women, Art and Power
and
Other Essays (NY: Harper and Row, 1988), pp. 145-78
*Wiesner, Women and Gender, Ch. 5.

Other Bibliography
Decoteau, Pamela Hibbs, Clara Peeters 1594-ca. 1640 and the Development of Still-Life Painting
in Northern Europe (Lingen, 1992)
Hamburger, Jeffrey. Nuns as Artists: The Visual Culture of a Medieval Convent (Berkeley, 1997)
Harris, Ann Sutherland and Linda Nochlin. Women Artists: 1550-1950 (L.A. County Museum of
Art exh., 1976)
Judith Leyster: A Dutch Master and Her World, Frans Halsmuseum, Haarlem and Worcester Art
Museum exh. (Yale, 1993)
Parker, Rozsika and Griselda Pollock. Old Mistresses: Women, Art and Ideology (New York,
1981).

Week 13-14

10. EIGHTEENTH CENTURY: EROTICISM AND RATIONALISM

Rococo: Boucher, Fragonard


Enlightenment thought

Reading
Secondary material
*Chadwick, Women, Art and Society, ch. 5
*Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. "Women and the Enlightenment," in Becoming Visible, ed. R.
Bridenthal et al. (Boston: Houghton, 1987), pp. 251-77

Other Bibliography
DeJean, Joan. Tender Geographies: Women and the Origins of the Novel in France. (Columbia
U. Press)
Dock, T.S. Women in the Encyclopdie (Madrid, 1983)
Duncan, Carol. "Happy Mothers and Other New Ideas in 18th-Century Art," in Feminism and Art
History: Questioning the Litany, ed. Norma Broude and Mary Garrard (New York:
Harper & Row), pp. 201-20
Fritz, Paul, and Richard Morton, eds., Woman in the 18th Century and Other Essays (Toronto and
Sarasota, 1976)
Goodman, Dena. The Republic of Letters: A Cultural History of the French Enlightenment
(Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1994)
Hyde, Melissa. Making up the Rococo: Franois Boucher and his Critics (L.A.: Getty), 2006.
Hyde, Melissa, ed. Women, Art and the Politics of Identity in the 18th century (Aldershot and
Burlington: Ashgate, 2006).
Lichtenstein, Jacqueline, AMaking Up Representation: The Risks of Femininity,@
Representations 20 (1987), 77-87
Landes, Joan. Women and the Public Sphere in the Age of the French Revolution (Ithaca, 1988).
Lee, Vera. The Reign of Women in 18th-Century France (Harvard, 1975)
Perry, Gill, and Michael Rossington, eds. Femininity and Masculinity in Eighteenth-Century Art
and Culture (Manchester, 1994)
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