
This book provides new insights into how theatre responded to changing economic practices and structures. It reviews discourses on household management and commerce to create a rich context for the discussion of socio-economic actions and transactions in Macbeth, Othello, and Timon of Athens, as well as in city comedies by Ben Jonson and Thomas Middleton. By approaching discourses on economy and commerce as complementary, the book opens up a diverse field of socio-economic practices, including the gendered division of duties in the household, new modes of valuation, and evolving credit instruments.Theatre provides unique access to this field. In contrast to practical and policy-oriented discourses, it addresses socio-economic change and its vicissitudes in a spirit of experimentation, testing the ethical limits of socio-economic action and accustoming audiences to the demands of a changing socio-economic reality. Theatre thus offers a vital contribution to the prehistory of political economy. On the London stages, self-interest emerges as a key motive of socio-economic action, and theatre playfully explores its ambiguous status as a partly rational and partly excessive force that has a new ordering function but also creates social conflict. At the same time, by staging the contradictory demands of ethics and efficiency in economic decision-making, early modern plays offer access to a changing understanding of prudence that has a Machiavellian touch: by aligning with the pursuit of private interest, prudence sheds some of its ethical content and becomes foremost an instrumental faculty.
This book investigates how early modern English theatre functioned as a site for testing and reflecting upon the shifting economic structures and commercial practices of the period. Prof. Anne Enderwitz utilizes a framework that bridges household management discourses with emerging mercantile commerce to analyze how playwrights navigated the tension between traditional ethics and new, instrumental forms of prudence. By examining the works of Shakespeare, Jonson, and Middleton, the author argues that the stage served as a laboratory for exploring the social and ethical consequences of self-interest and evolving credit systems.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of early modern studies identify this work as a significant contribution to the intersection of economic history and literary analysis. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous examination of how theatrical experimentation anticipated modern political economy.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2023-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192866818
ISBN-13:
9780192866813
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