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OverviewVengeance permeates English Renaissance drama - for example, it crops up in all but two of Shakespeare's plays. This book explores why a supposedly forgiving Christian culture should have relished such bloodthirsty, vengeful plays. A clue lies in the plays' passion for fairness, a preoccupation suggesting widespread resentment of systemic unfairness - legal, economic, political and social. Revengers' precise equivalents - the father of two beheaded sons obliges his enemy to eat her two sons' heads - are vigilante versions of Elizabethan law, where penalties suit the crimes: thieves' hands were cut off, scolds' tongues bridled. The revengers' language of 'paying' hints at the operation of revenge in the service of economic redress. Revenge makes contact with resistance theory, justifying overthrow of tyrants, and some revengers challenge the fundamental inequity of social class. Woodbridge demonstrates how, for all their sensationalism, their macabre comedy and outlandish gore, Renaissance revenge plays do some serious cultural work. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Linda Woodbridge (Professor, Pennsylvania State University)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press (Virtual Publishing) ISBN: 9780511781469ISBN 10: 0511781466 Publication Date: 06 December 2010 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Undefined Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsPart I. Rampant Revenge: 1. Getting what one deserves; 2. Can two wrongs ever make a right? Some theory; Part II. Economic Unfairness: Revenge and Money: 3. Balancing the books: revenge, commercial mathematics, and the balance of trade; 4. Payback time: reward, retaliation, and the deluge of debt; 5. The goddess with the scales - and the blindfold; Part III. Political Unfairness: Revenge and Resistance: 6. 'A special inward commandment': the mid-sixteenth century; 7. Resistance in the golden age of revenge plays; 8. Revenge and regicide: the Civil War era; Part IV. Social Unfairness: Vengeance and Equality: 9. Revenge and class warfare; 10. Quantification revisited: revenge and social equality; Conclusion; Bibliography.Reviews"""This is a brilliant and convincing way to account for early modern England's obsession with leveling the score."" -David Hawkes, Arizona State Univercity, TLS" This is a brilliant and convincing way to account for early modern England's obsession with leveling the score. -David Hawkes, Arizona State Univercity, TLS This is a brilliant and convincing way to account for early modern England's obsession with leveling the score. -David Hawkes, Arizona State Univercity, TLS Author InformationLinda Woodbridge is Weiss Chair in the Humanities and Professor of English at Pennsylvania State University. She has published widely on the subjects of English Renaissance literature, women in literature, folklore and revenge. Her books include Women and the English Renaissance: Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540–1620 (1984), Shakespeare: A Selective Bibliography of Criticism (1988), The Scythe of Saturn: Shakespeare and Magical Thinking (1994) and Vagrancy, Homelessness, and English Renaissance Literature (2001). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |