Store besparelser
Hurtig levering
Fri fragt over 499,-
Gemte
Log ind
0
Kurv
Kurv
Selfish Gifts
- The Politics of Exchange and English Courtly Literarture, 1580-1628
Engelsk Hardback
Se mere i:

Selfish Gifts

- The Politics of Exchange and English Courtly Literarture, 1580-1628
Engelsk Hardback

835 kr
Tilføj til kurv
Sikker betaling
23 - 25 hverdage

Om denne bog
Engaging with a wide range of texts on gift-theory, extending from Senecas De Beneficiis to Derridas Given Time, Selfish Gifts examines the importance of gift ethics and the rhetoric of honorable giving to the literature of late Elizabeth and early Stuart England. It demonstrates that the ideal of the freely given and disinterested gift shaped the language of early modern clientage, along with literary representations of patrons and patronage systems during this period. Selfish Gifts examines how early modern clients moved quickly and strategically to assimilate the language of competition and equality, characteristic of an emerging market economy, within their existing discourses of gift exchange, in order to maximize the rewards they might induce from an increasingly diverse group of patrons. To give is to exercise power and thus, as numerous modern gift-theorists and anthropologists elucidate, the gift is implicitly self-interested even as it derives value from appearing altruistic; nowhere is this paradox more significant than in a patronage economy such as that which shaped literary production in early modern England. In pursuing that paradox and its implications, Selfish Gifts highlights crucial connections and cultural tensions between political and sexual giving, between ''giving'' truth and flattery, between the sovereignty and subjection of gift donor/recipient, and between strategic and so-called ''sacrificial'' giving. Those tensions are examined in the context of the latter years of Elizabeth Is rule, through the contrasting reign of James I and up to the early Caroline period. Selfish Gifts demonstrates the prominence of the gift ideal in Renaissance England and suggests the disturbing social and political consequences for those who give contrary to that ideal by bestowing self-interested gifts, by refusing to give, or by giving egotistically. The book establishes the centrality of gift theory to the discourses of patronage, friendship, and sovereignty, sugg
Product detaljer
Sprog:
Engelsk
Sider:
303
ISBN-13:
9781611473186
Indbinding:
Hardback
Udgave:
ISBN-10:
1611473187
Udg. Dato:
1 dec 2005
Længde:
22mm
Bredde:
168mm
Højde:
245mm
Forlag:
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Oplagsdato:
1 dec 2005
Forfatter(e):
Finder produkter...
Kategori sammenhænge