This section contains 2,101 words (approx. 6 pages at 400 words per page) |
In contrast to the virgins' "ramble" are the stasis and thralldom that attend the courtesan Angellica Bianca. While the virgins are learning artful strategies of concealment, Angellica's entrance is a complicated process of theatrical unveiling. She arrives first through words, then through painted representation, then through the body of an actress who appears on a balcony behind a silk curtain. She is also the site of a different politics, one that explores desire and gender not only in the text but in the apparatus itself.
The first references to Angellica situate her beyond the market in which we expect her to function. According to Behn's gallants, she is the "adord beauty of all the youth in Naples, who put on all their charms to appear lovely in her sight; their coaches, liveries and themselves all gay as on a monarch's birthday." Equated thus with sacred and secular...
This section contains 2,101 words (approx. 6 pages at 400 words per page) |