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Index
Cover Page Title Page Copyright Page Acknowledgments Contents Introduction Part 1. Theories of the Rogue
Fashioning Outlaws: The Early Modern Rogue and Urban Culture The Reckoning of Moll Cutpurse: A Transversal Enterprise Bryan Reynolds and Janna Segal New Historicism, Historical Context, and the Literature of Roguery: The Case of Thomas Harman Reopened
Appendix: The Case of Nicholas Jennings Alias Blunt Before London’s Court of Aldermen 13 January, 9 Elizabeth I (1567)
The Counterfeit Vagrant: The Dynamic of Deviance in the Bridewell Court Records and the Literature of Roguery
Part 2. Marketplaces and Rogue Economics
The Peddler and the Pawn: Why Did Tudor England Consider Peddlers to Be Rogues? “Masters of Their Occupation”: Labor and Fellowship in the Cony-Catching Pamphlets Making Vagrancy (In)visible: The Economics of Disguise in Early Modern Rogue Pamphlets
Part 3. Rogues and the Early Modern City
Sin City and the “Urban Condom”: Rogues, Writing, and the Early Modern Urban Environment Magic Books: Cony-Catching and the Romance of Early Modern London
Part 4. Typologies of the Rogue
Vagabond Veterans: The Roguish Company of Martin Guerre and Henry V Black Acts: Textual Labor and Commercial Deceit in Dekker’s Lantern and Candlelight Englishing the Rogue, “Translating” the Irish: Fantasies of Incorporation and Early Modern English National Identity The Ambivalent Rogue: Moll Flanders as Modern Pícara
Afterword: (Re)presenting the Early Modern Rogue Contributors Index
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