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El. knyga: Aesthetics of Service in Early Modern England

  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jan-2012
  • Leidėjas: Northwestern University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780810165632
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jan-2012
  • Leidėjas: Northwestern University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780810165632

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In The Aesthetics of Service in Early Modern England, Elizabeth Rivlin explores the ways in which servant-master relationships reshaped literature. The early modern servant is enjoined to obey his or her master out of dutiful love, but the servant s duty actually amounts to standing in for the master, a move that opens the possibility of becoming master. Rivlin shows that service is fundamentally a representational practice, in which the servant who acts for a master merges with the servant who acts as a master. 

Rivlin argues that in the early modern period, servants found new positions as subjects and authors found new forms of literature. Represent- ations of servants and masters became a site of contact between pressing material concerns and evolving aesthetic ones. Offering readings of dramas by Shakespeare, Jonson, and Thomas Dekker and prose fictions by Thomas Deloney and Thomas Nashe, Rivlin suggests that these authors discovered their own exciting and unstable projects in the servants they created.



Acknowledgments vii
Introduction The Aesthetics of Service 3(24)
Chapter One Shakespeare's Apprenticeship: Performing Service in The Comedy of Errors and The Two Gentlemen of Verona
27(26)
Chapter Two Prose Fiction and the Mobile Servant: Nashe's The Unfortunate Traveller
53(20)
Chapter Three "Play the Shoemaker": Craft and Commerce in Deloney's The Gentle Craft and Dekker's The Shoemaker's Holiday
73(34)
Chapter Four "Iterate the Work": The Alchemist and Ben Jonson's Labors of Service
107(28)
Chapter Five Tragicomic Service: The Winter's Tale and The Tempest
135(30)
Notes 165(30)
Bibliography 195(14)
Index 209