Early Modern Bonds of Trust
From Shakespeare to Milton
Professor Alison Findlay editor Helen Wilcox editor Joseph Sterrett editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publishing:24th Apr '25
£80.00
This title is due to be published on 24th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
Explores the role of trust and risk to personal, communal and institutional relationships in early modern English texts.
The concepts of trust and risk provide important insights into the social and cultural life of early modern England but remain relatively unexplored in early modern literary studies.
This collection addresses that gap by exploring a wide range of literary genres and texts including comic drama, lyric verse, emblem books, ledgers, wills, polemical prose and religious epic. Contributors explore issues of personal trust through the faith and lies that characterize Shakespeare’s sonnets, Donne’s sermons and Milton’s Paradise Lost. Following the idea of trust and risk into community brings us to a discussion of TheMerry Wives of Windsor, the spiritual trust of faith communities and the network of relationships that are traceable though surviving records of women’s wills. Following this progression outwards from the personal to the communal, the final essays in the collection consider the role of institutional trust, specifically the early modern obsession with credit in its various guises. The Merchant of Venice, Volpone and The Winter’s Tale act as illustrative examples of credit’s significance for understanding trust and risk in the early modern period. Taken together the range of texts and genres considered reveal new insights into early modern English literature and its socio-economic context.
ISBN: 9781350462007
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
256 pages