Thomas Dekker and the culture of pamphleteering in early modern London
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Thomas Dekker and the culture of pamphleteering in early modern London
New York : Routledge, 2016
- : hbk
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Note
Includes index
First published 2014 by Ashgate publishing
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Thomas Dekker (c.1572-1632) was a prolific playwright and pamphleteer chiefly remembered for his vivid and witty portrayals of everyday London life. This book uses Dekker's prose pamphlets (published between 1613 and 1628) as a way in to a crucial and relatively neglected period of the history of pamphleteering. Under James I, after the aggressive Elizabethan exploitation of the new media, pamphleteers carved out a discursive space in which claims about truth and authority could be deconstructed. Avoiding the dangerous polemic employed by the Marprelate pamphleteers, they utilised playful, deliberately ambiguous language that drew readers' attention to their own literary devices and games. Dekker shows pamphlets to be unstable and roguish, and the nakedly commercial imperatives of the book trade to be central to the world of Jacobean cheap print, as he introduces us to a world in which overlapping and competing discourses jostled for position in London's streets, markets and pulpits. Contributing to the history of print and to the history of Jacobean London, this book also provides an appraisal of the often misunderstood prose works of an author who deserves more attention, especially from historians, than he has so far received. Critics are slowly becoming aware that Dekker was not the straightforward, simple hack writer of so many accounts; his works are complex and richly reward study in their own right as well as in the context of his more famous predecessors and contemporaries. As such this book will further contribute to a post-revisionist historiography of political consciousness and print cultures under the early Stuarts, as well as illuminate the career of a neglected writer.
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 Introduction 'This Printing age of ours'
- Chapter 1a The Pamphlets in London
- Chapter 2 Debts of Various Kinds: Dekker's Relationships
- Chapter 3 'The eares brothell': Dekker's London
- Chapter 4 Vice, Folly, and Rogues
- Chapter 5 Sin, Plague, and the Politics of Peace
- conclusion Conclusion
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