European University Institute Library

Discovering the subject in Renaissance England, Elizabeth Hanson

Label
Discovering the subject in Renaissance England, Elizabeth Hanson
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Discovering the subject in Renaissance England
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
48138720
Responsibility statement
Elizabeth Hanson
Series statement
Cambridge studies in Renaissance literature and culture, 24Cambridge Social Sciences eBooks
Summary
When Hamlet complains that Guildenstern 'would pluck out the heart of [his] mystery', he imagines an encounter that recurs insistently in the discourses of early modern England. The struggle by one man to discover the secrets in another's heart is rehearsed not only in plays but in legal records, correspondence, philosophical writing and contemporary social description. In this book Elizabeth Hanson argues that the construction of other people as objects of discovery signalled a reconceptualizing of the 'subject' in both the political and philosophical sense of the term. She examines the records of state torture, plays by Shakespeare and Jonson, 'cony-catching' pamphlets and Francis Bacon's philosophical writing, to demonstrate that the subject was both under suspicion and empowered in this period. Her account revises earlier attempts to locate the emergence of modern subjectivity in the Renaissance, arguing for a more nuanced and localized understanding of the relationship with its medieval past.--, Provided by publisher
Content
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