Money and the Age of Shakespeare: Essays in New Economic Criticism

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Linda Woodbridge
Palgrave Macmillan, 2003 M11 15 - 281 páginas
Literary scholars, theorists, and historians deploy New Economic techniques to illuminate English Renaissance literature in fresh ways. Contributors variously explore poetry's precarious perch between gift and commodity; the longing for family in The Comedy of Errors as symbolically expressing the alienating pressures of mercantilism; Measure for Measure's representation of singlewomen and the feminization of poverty; the collision between two views of money in a possible collaboration between Shakespeare and Middleton; the cultural spread of an accounting mentality and quantitative thinking; and money as it crosses the frontier between price and pricelessness, from early bodily-injury insurance schemes to The Merchant of Venice.

Acerca del autor (2003)

Linda Woodbridge is Distinguished Professor of English at Pennsylvania State University.

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