This book engages in an interdisciplinary study of the establishment and entrenchment of gender roles in early modern England. Drawing upon the methods and sources of literary criticism and social history, this edited volume shows how politics at both the elite and plebeian levels of society involved violence that either resulted from or expressed hostility toward the early modern gender system. Contributors take fresh approaches to prominent works by Shakespeare, Middleton, and Behn as well as discuss lesser known texts and events such as the execution of female heretics in Reformation Norwich and the punishment of prostitutes in seventeenth-century London to draw new conclusions about gender in early modern England.
Table des matières
Introduction; C.Levin & J.P.Ward PART I: VENERABLE PATRIARCHS/VULNERABLE PATRIARCHS Apprentice Riots in Early Modern London; P.S.Seaver But She Woulde Not Consent’: Women’s Narratives of Sexual Assault and Compulsion in Early Modern London; C.M.Varholy Writing Rape, Raping Rites: Shakespeare’s and Middleton’s Lucrece Poems; C.Daileader Eve as Thanatrix: Sabbatarianism and the Republican Politics of Death and Resurrection in Lucy Hutchinson’s Order and Disorder; K.Gillespie PART II: GENDER AND STATE VIOLENCE Women, Religious Dissent, and Urban Authority In Early Reformation Norwich; M.C.Mc Clendon Power of the County: Sheriffs and Violence in Early Modern England; M.C.Noonkester Executing the Body Politic: Inscribing State Violence onto Aphra Behn’s Oroonoko; S.Miller London’s Bridewell: Violence, Prostitution, and Questions of Evidence; M.Mowry ‘I will forgive you if the world will’: Wife-Murder and the Limits on Patriarchal Violence in London, 1690-1750; J.Hurl-Eamon Afterword; F.E.Dolan
A propos de l’auteur
Joseph P. Ward is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of History of the University of Mississippi, USA.