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Literature and Favoritism in Early Modern England

Literature and Favoritism in Early Modern England

Literature and Favoritism in Early Modern England

Curtis Perry, Arizona State University
July 2009
Available
Paperback
9780521117326

    For writers in the early modern period, thinking about royal favorites inevitably meant thinking about the uneasy intersection of the personal and the public in a political system traditionally organized around patronage and intimacy. Depictions of favoritism - in a variety of texts including plays, poems, libels, and pamphlets - explore the most fundamental ideological questions concerning personal monarchy and the early modern public sphere, questions about the nature and limits of prerogative and about the enfranchisement or otherwise of subjects. In this study, Curtis Perry examines the ideological underpinnings of the heated controversies surrounding powerful royal favorites and the idea of favoritism in the late Elizabethan and early Stuart period. Perry argues that the discourse of corrupt favoritism is this period's most important unofficial vehicle for exploring constitutional unease concerning the nature and limits of personal monarchy within the balanced English constitution.

    • Introduces a fresh way of thinking about the prehistory of English republican thought
    • Combines literary critical methodologies and historiographical concerns
    • Includes accessible readings of a wide range of fascinating and under-appreciated Renaissance plays

    Product details

    July 2009
    Paperback
    9780521117326
    340 pages
    229 × 152 × 19 mm
    0.5kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgements
    • A note on texts
    • 1. 'Prerogative Pleasures': favoritism and monarchy in early modern England
    • 2. Leicester and his ghosts
    • 3. Amici Principis: imagining the good favorite
    • 4. Poisoning favor
    • 5. Erotic favoritism as a language of corruption in early modern drama
    • 6. 'What pleased the prince': Edward II and the imbalanced constitution
    • 7. Instrumental favoritism and the uses of Roman history
    • Afterword: 'In a true sense there is no Monarchy'
    • Notes
    • Index.
      Author
    • Curtis Perry , University of Illinois

      Curtis Perry is Associate Professor of English at Arizona State University. He is the author of The Making of Jacobean Culture: James I and the Renegotiation of Elizabethan Literary Practice (Cambridge University Press, 1997), the editor of Material Culture and Cultural Materialisms in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance (2001), and has had numerous articles and chapters published on the subject of early modern English literature and culture.