Saturday, March 12, 2011

Spotlight: Dairy Queens: The Politics of Pastoral Architecture from Catherine de' Medici to Marie-Antoinette


Dairy Queens: The Politics of Pastoral Architecture from Catherine de Medici to Marie Antoinette by Meredith Martin

In a lively narrative that spans more than two centuries, Meredith Martin tells the story of a royal and aristocratic building type that has been largely forgotten today: the pleasure dairy of early modern France. These garden structures—most famously the faux-rustic, white marble dairy built for Marie-Antoinette’s Hameau at Versailles—have long been dismissed as the trifling follies of a reckless elite. Martin challenges such assumptions and reveals the pivotal role that pleasure dairies played in cultural and political life, especially with respect to polarizing debates about nobility, femininity, and domesticity. Together with other forms of pastoral architecture such as model farms and hermitages, pleasure dairies were crucial arenas for elite women to exercise and experiment with identity and power.

Opening with Catherine de’ Medici’s lavish dairy at Fontainebleau (c. 1560), Martin’s book explores how French queens and noblewomen used pleasure dairies to naturalize their status, display their cultivated tastes, and proclaim their virtue as nurturing mothers and capable estate managers. Pleasure dairies also provided women with a site to promote good health, by spending time in salubrious gardens and consuming fresh milk. Illustrated with a dazzling array of images and photographs, Dairy Queens sheds new light on architecture, self, and society in the ancien rĂ©gime. (Production Description from Harvard University Press)

I hope I get to read this one soon. I will probably wait until I can borrow it from a library, because of the higher price tag, but for now Google Books provides a preview of what looks to be an interesting look into the politics of "royal" dairies.

No comments:

Post a Comment