Mendacity in Early Modern Literature and Culture

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aesthetics
Ars Apodemica
Category=DSB
Category=JBCC9
Catholic Casuistry
Colonial Administration
Coryat
Coryat's Crudities
Coryat’s Crudities
deception
Donne
Eager Appetite
early modern England
early modern literature
Early Modern Travel
Early Modern Travel Accounts
Early Modern Travel Narratives
Early Modern Travel Writing
English literature
English Renaissance
epistemology of lying in literature
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
European Journal of English Studies
gender and education history
Gulliver's Master
Gulliver's Travels
Gulliver’s Master
Gulliver’s Travels
literary deception
Lithgow
Lithgow's Totall Discourse
Lithgow’s Totall Discourse
lying
mendacity
Milton
Milton's Eve
Milton's Insistence
Milton’s Eve
Milton’s Insistence
Paradise Lost
philosophical discourse
political discourse
political discourse analysis
religious discourse
religious rhetoric studies
Rhetorical Distortion
Rhetorical Embellishment
Richard III
Shakespeare
Shakespeare's Lucrece
Shakespeare’s Lucrece
Superordinate Genres
Swift
Thomas Coryat's Crudities
Thomas Coryat’s Crudities
Totall Discourse
truth
truth-telling norms
Venetian Courtesan
William Lithgow
Woman's Constancy
Woman’s Constancy

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138391802
  • Weight: 220g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jan 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Mendacity in Early Modern Literature and Culture examines the historical, cultural, and epistemological underpinnings of lying and deception in early modern England, including the political, religious, aesthetic, and philosophical discourses that governed the codes of lying and truth-telling from the sixteenth to the early eighteenth centuries. The contributions to this collection draw on a wide range of early modern English literature from Shakespeare to Swift, and from travel writing to poetry, in order to explore the extent to which plays, poems, and narrative texts in this period were sites of negotiation, and, at times, of ideological warfare between the moral imperative of truth-telling and the expediency of telling lies. What were the cultural norms of truthfulness and lying, and on what basis were they constructed? What were the consequences when someone did not share the assumed common project of truth-telling? And which forms of communication were exempt from the pragmatic strictures on mendacious discourse? This book was originally published as a special issue of the European Journal of English Studies.

Ingo Berensmeyer is Professor of English and American Literature at Justus Liebig University, Giessen, Germany, and Visiting Professor of English Literature and Culture at Ghent University, Belgium. His research interests range from Shakespeare to contemporary literature. His most recent publications are 'Angles of Contingency': Literarische Kultur im England des siebzehnten Jahrhunderts (2007); study guides to Shakespeare's Hamlet (2007) and to Literary Theory (2009) and the co-edited book Perspectives on Mobility (with Christoph Ehland, 2013).

Andrew Hadfield is Professor of English at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK, and Visiting Professor at the University of Granada, Spain. He is the author of a number of works on early modern literature, including Edmund Spenser: A Life (2012), Shakespeare and Republicanism (2005), and Literature, Travel and Colonialism in the English Renaissance, 1540-1625 (1998). He is vice-chair of the Society for Renaissance Studies and is currently writing a book on lying in early modern England.