JOSEPH HALL’S MUNDUS ALTER ET IDEM AND CROSS DRESSING IN EARLY MODERN ENGLAND Cover Image

JOSEPH HALL’S MUNDUS ALTER ET IDEM AND CROSS-DRESSING IN EARLY MODERN ENGLAND
JOSEPH HALL’S MUNDUS ALTER ET IDEM AND CROSS DRESSING IN EARLY MODERN ENGLAND

Author(s): Csaba Maczelka
Subject(s): Gender Studies
Published by: Universitatea de Vest din Timişoara
Keywords: crossdressing

Summary/Abstract: This paper argues that early modern English utopias in general, and Joseph Hall’s Mundus alter et idem (1605/1606) in particular, engage in the contemporary debate on cross-dressing. After a look at the problem of early modern cross-dressing, the paper introduces Hall’s work, together with some of the opinions about it. Out of the four books of the work, only the second part (the description of Viraginia/Shee-landt) is discussed here in detail, since it abounds in instances of cross-dressing and related phenomena (for example, sexual licence and hermaphroditism). In my reading, Hall’s work readily joins the ongoing debate, but because of its masterful rhetorical strategies and its satirical perspective, the text poses a great challenge if one tries to accurately identify its positionin that debate.

  • Issue Year: 2012
  • Issue No: 11
  • Page Range: 98-121
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English