Submissions for Envisioning the Tudor Woman: Historical and Modern Representations of
Women 1485-1600
We invite proposals for papers to be
included in a multidisciplinary edited volume entitled Envisioning the Tudor Woman: Historical and Modern Representations of
Women from the Tudor Era. Please submitting a proposal before July 1 2015; the final deadline for complete essays will be December 1, 2015. Papers must be between 4000 – 6,000 words in length and
focus on the way women from 1485-1603 have been depicted in art and culture.
This edited volume aims to bring
together scholars from a variety of fields to provide a variety of different
perspectives to the way in which Tudor women – famous, infamous, or typical --
have been represented both in their own era and in other historical periods. Conceptualizations
of how Tudor women looked, felt, and behaved have been used lavishly in
literature and media, nearly saturating popular culture and historical fiction.
What does history have to say about Tudor women and their role in their culture
and society? In what ways were Tudor women portrayed by their contemporaries?
How do the Tudor women of fiction align or diverge from historical facts? In
what ways do constructions of Tudor women reflect the gender and sociocultural
ideologies of those imagining them?
Topics might include, but are not
limited to:
- Tudor
femininity in literature and narrative fiction
- Artistic
presentations of Tudor women past and present
- Gender
ideologies and the conceptualization of Tudor women
- Tudor women from a feminist perspective
- The
roles of Tudor women in their own culture
- The
contemporary fan culture surrounding famous Tudor women
- Tudor
women as a method to promote British tourism
- Women
depicted in Tudor poetry and drama
- Medical
explanations of femininity in Tudor culture
- Tudor
women in twentieth century romance novels
Please contact Amy Licence (amy_licence@yahoo.co.uk) or Kyra Kramer (kyra.cornelius.kramer@gmail.com) or find us on facebook to submit or discuss proposals.