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Index
Cover
Title Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
I
II
III
IV
References
Part I: Conditions of Subjectivity
1 Gender
What to Read Next
References
2 Love and Friendship
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References
3 Race and Colonization
I
II
III
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References
4 Agency and Choice
Hegel and the Coming of a Modern Age
The “Self” and Hamlet
Agency and Institutions
Agency and Choice in 1 Henry 4
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References
5 Religion and the Religious Turn
The Religious Turn in Shakespeare Studies
Post‐Secularism: Definitions and Dilemmas
Weak Post‐secularism: Shakespeare/Habermas
Non‐Christian Post‐secularism: Shakespeare/Asad
Ecofeminist Post‐secularism: Shakespeare/Braidotti
Conclusion: Post‐secular Shakespeare?
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References
6 Desire and Representation
Theater of the Incommensurable
Desire in the Abyss
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References
7 Service
Shakespeare’s Othello
Webster, The Duchess of Malfi
Middleton and Rowley, The Changeling
Coda: John Ford, ’Tis Pity She’s a Whore
What to Read Next
References
8 The Body and Its Lives
Social Histories of the Body
Bodies in Pain and the Sexualized Body
The Body in Parts
The Medicalized Body
Textualized Bodies
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References
9 Objects and Things
A Few Words About Worlds and Pictures
Donne’s Relics
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References
Part II: Places, Spaces, and Forms
10 The Market
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References
11 Nature and the Non‐Human
I
II
III
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References
12 Nation and Archipelago
Context
Articles of Peace
The Ormond‐Jones Letters
The Belfast Presbytery
Milton’s Observations
Critical Perspectives
Conclusion
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References
13 London
I
II
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References
14 The Church
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References
15 The Republic of Letters and the Commonwealth of Learning
The Commonwealth of Learning
The Political Virtues of Communicative Reason
Martin Marprelate’s Children
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References
16 Romance
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References
17 The Court
Fixed as the Isle
Tilting at the Castle of Loyalty
Kindly Service
To Fashion a Gentleman
All Princes, I
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References
18 The Household
Epicoene: Privacy and Authority
Arden of Faversham: Possession and Authority
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References
Part III: Practices and Theories
19 Rhetorics of Similitude
I
II
What to Read Next
References
20 Publication
I
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References
Printed and digital sources
21 Authorship
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References
22 Reading
From Implied Reading to Material Reading
Reading, Sociability, and Composition
Conclusion
What to Read Next
References
23 Science and Early Modern Literature
Trinity
Criticism and Science
Early Modern Literature and Science 2.0
Coda
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References
24 Representation
Recycled Jewels
Painted Sepulchers
True Eternitie
The Fountain and the Mirror
Coda
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References
25 Historiography
“The Kings Castle”
Historiographical Transformations
Cannibalizing the Chronicle
Humanism and the Uses of the Past
The Uses of Ecclesiastical History
The Flowering of the Past
How to Write a History
Dissemination
Conclusion
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References
26 Devotion
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References
27 The Book
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References
Paintings
28 Travel and Chorography
Plotting a History of Particulars
Journeys, Space, and Place
The Politics of Chorography
What to Read Next
References
Index
End User License Agreement
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