EBOOK

Social Dramas

Literature and Language in Early-Modern England.

David A. Postles
(0)
Pages
192
Year
2010
Language
English

About

How the repeated social tropes and paradigms of the City comedies give us an in-depth look into everyday London society in the early 17th-century.

Although literature is often, assumed to belong to the sphere of representation rather than constituting an accurate reflection of social reality, early-modern English drama can tell us much about social attitudes in the early seventeenth century. The City comedies were, in particular, composed by authors, who were embedded in the mundane social existence of London, in its quotidian transactions and exchanges, in its less salubrious contexts of debt, drinking, death and incarceration. To elucidate the complex social attitudes of the City urban elite, five particular themes are, explored: the symbolism of attire; matrimonial talk; the use of money (coin) as metaphor and metonymy; "over-exuberance" towards the opportunity of the "New World"; and continuing differences of speech and customary language use.

Although the dramatists had slightly differing allegiances, their commentaries all illuminate "middling" society in the City of London.

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