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- Title
The Ring's the Thing: Elizabeth I's Virgin Knot and All's Well That Ends Well.
- Authors
Peterson, Kaara L.
- Abstract
This essay explores the Elizabethan cultural construction of the virgin's ring, construed broadly within various literary, artistic, and historical works. Drawing on medical literature's negative perspective of virginal bodies, the essay focuses first on the largely unexamined device of the virgin's ring plot and its pointed relationship to bed-tricks in Shakespearean comedy, particularly All's Well That Ends Well, arguing that the presence of material ring props onstage is deeply informed by the complex cultural understanding of rings as over- determined symbols of both virginity and marital chastity since the advent of the "virgin queen's" rhetorically invoked "marriage" to England. Turning to the visual arts for examples of portraits that depict rings prominently on their canvases, the essay explains how Elizabethan culture negotiated the queen's possession of her virgin's ring even as the aging Elizabeth's hymeneal integrity threatened to devolve into a useless commodity.
- Subjects
ESSAYS; REIGN of Elizabeth I, England, 1558-1603; ELIZABETHAN art; RINGS (Jewelry); RINGS (Jewelry) in literature; SIGNS &; symbols; MEDICAL literature; HISTORY
- Publication
Studies in Philology, 2016, Vol 113, Issue 1, p101
- ISSN
0039-3738
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1353/sip.2016.0001