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Equivocation in Early Modern England
Equivocation in Early Modern England
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€100.99
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Product details
- ISBN 9780198954408
- Weight: 680g
- Dimensions: 164 x 240mm
- Publication Date: 04 Sep 2025
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
Equivocation in Early Modern England: Literature, Rhetoric, Theology explores ideas about concealing the truth while seemingly revealing it. It is about the conflict, whether historical or fictional, between the interrogator's desire to gain information, the suspect's desire to hide the information, and the divine prohibition against lying. The Gunpowder Plot supposedly led to the revelation of the doctrine of equivocation, a secret teaching of the Roman Catholic Church that enabled concealing one's intentions and knowledge without lying. This book examines conflicting meanings of 'equivocation' to show how contemporary writers made sense of the theological-political debates, and how this in turn shaped their writings and understanding of how language works. It is an intellectual history of equivocation, tracing its evolution from antiquity to the present through an analysis of works by Euripides, Virgil, Shakespeare, Donne, rhetoricians from Cicero to Melanchthon, and theological polemicists, including Henry Garnet, Robert Persons, George Abbot, Thomas Morton, and Isaac Casaubon.
It combines a curiosity about equivocation as a linguistic, philosophical, and rhetorical notion that was keenly exploited by secular writers with a scrutiny of the cultural, political, and religious processes that contributed to its development. It explores the impact of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century literature, education, networks of correspondence, and controversies on the concept of ambiguity. It reveals how encounters with various forms of deception, including lying, strategic silence, dissimulation, and equivocation, resulted in an ever-growing anxiety about, and fascination with, ambiguity. It provides a radically new evaluation of equivocation that, as Macbeth puts it in his final despair, 'lies like truth'.
Máté Vince is a literary and intellectual historian of the early modern period. He works on the European Research Council-funded 'Textuality and Diversity: A Literary History of Europe and its Global Connections, 1545-1661' project with Warren Boutcher. At Warwick, he co-edited the critical edition of the Correspondence of Isaac Casaubon in England with Paul Botley, followed by an Irish Research Council Postdoctoral Fellowship at Trinity College Dublin. He has published on Shakespeare, classical reception, the history of rhetoric, and theological controversies, and taught literature, Latin, palaeography, and intellectual history in the UK, Ireland, and Hungary.
Equivocation in Early Modern England
€100.99
