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<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>This book uncovers the significance of body size—of fatness and thinness—in early modern Germany. It explores how early modern people conceived of fat and thin bodies, in terms of both the cultural meanings attached to body size and personal perceptions of the body. The book argues that body size assumed increasing prominence in German society and culture from the late fifteenth to the early seventeenth century. During this period, perceptions and practices relating to body size shifted dramatically, as the size and shape of people’s bodies attracted unprecedented attention. Body size became embedded in everyday habits and experiences like never before. This transformation took place against the backdrop of profound social, religious, and cultural developments which characterized the sixteenth century. Drawing on a wide array of sources, the book charts changing attitudes towards body size in relation to these developments, including the proliferation of printed medical advice, artistic theories of proportion, Reformation debates, and new body-moulding fashions. It also connects shifting ideals for women’s and men’s bodies to the embodied experiences of early modern protagonists. By revealing the enormous importance that early modern Germans attached to body size, this study overturns the false assumption that concern with body size is a modern phenomenon and sheds new light on sixteenth-century German culture.</jats:p>

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body size early modern book

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