Beauty or Beast?

Beauty or Beast? The Woman Warrior in the German Imagination from the Renaissance to the Present

Hardback (17 Jun 2010)

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Publisher's Synopsis

A regiment of women warriors strides across the battlefield of German culture - on the stage, in the opera house, on the page, and in paintings and prints. These warriors are re-imaginings by men of figures such as the Amazons, the Valkyries, and the biblical killer Judith. They are transgressive and therefore frightening figures who leave their proper female sphere and have to be made safe by being killed, deflowered, or both. This has produced some compelling works of Western culture - Cranach's and Klimt's paintings of Judith, Schiller's Joan of Arc, Hebbel's Judith, Wagner's Brünnhilde, Fritz Lang's Brünhild. Nowadays, representations of the woman warrior are used as a way of thinking about the woman terrorist. Women writers only engage with these imaginings at the end of the 19th century, but from the late 18th century on they begin to imagine fictional cross-dressers going to war in a realistic setting and thus think the unthinkable. What are the roots of these imaginings? And how are they related to Freud's ideas about women's sexuality?

Book information

ISBN: 9780199558230
Publisher: OUP OXFORD
Imprint: Oxford University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 830.93522
DEWEY edition: 22
Language: English
Number of pages: 309
Weight: 702g
Height: 243mm
Width: 166mm
Spine width: 22mm