"This exciting multidisciplinary collection of essays is the first to historicize female beauty and its varied practices in Western Europe across the centuries. Analysing beauty systems as socially-produced from their conceptualisation to their performance, the volume's varied theoretical and disciplinary explorations present perceptive interrogations and stimulating provocations on the ambivalent meanings of desire, power, control, status, agency and market values over time."—Susan Broomhall, Professor of History; Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions, The University of Western Australia"This rich and wide-ranging collection on "female beauty systems" elucidates the ways in which such systems function in different historical contexts, from early modern courts and salons to contemporary societies inhabited by surgically enhanced "posthuman" bodies. These fascinating essays demonstrate not only the impact of beauty systems on women and men, but also how women were able to "perform" beauty to gain political power, or how they resisted its premises and constraints.—Mihoko Suzuki, Professor of English; Director, Center for the Humanities, University of Miami"Exploring female beauty systems in North America and Europe from the Early Modern period to the present fixation with plastic surgery, this collection's case studies deftly expose both contested aspects, as well as the areas of manipulation. Collectively, the articles illuminate some of the major social and political events of the last several centuries. Scholars and students in the humanities will find this volume essential reading."—Jack R. Censer, Professor Emeritus, George Mason University