Description
Book SynopsisTaking Exception to the Law explores how a range of early modern English writings responded to injustices perpetrated by legal procedures, discourses, and institutions.
Trade Review'The editors gather an admirable selection of essays from a range of scholars...Taking Exception to the Law provokes stimulating conversation between legal and literary sources.' -- Larissa Tracy Sixteenth Century Studies vol 47:02:2016 'The volume takes its place among lively and rapidly expanding scholarship on early modern law and literature... Such a survey can do little, of course, to give a full sense of the richness of the volume but perhaps can tantalize readers with the variety of texts and breadth of concepts the authors tackle.' -- Karen Cunningham Renaissance Quarterly vol 69:02:2016 'Highly recommended' -- J.D. Sharpe Choice Magazine, vol 52:12:2015
Table of Contents1. Law and the Production of Literature: An Introductory Perspective (Grant Williams) 2. Paper Justice, Parchment Justice: Shakespeare, Hamlet, and the Life of Legal Documents (Bradin Cormack) 3. Conditional Promises and Legal Instruments in The Merchant of Venice (Tim Stretton) 4. The "Snared Subject" and the General Pardon Statute in Late Elizabethan Coterie Literature (Virginia Lee Strain) 5. The Prison Diaries of Archbishop Laud (Debora Shuger) 6. Criminal Biography in Early Modern News Pamphlets (David Stymeist) 7. Two-Sided Legal Narratives: Slander, Evidence, Proof, and Turnarounds in Much Ado About Nothing (Barbara Kreps) 8. No Boy Left Behind: Education and Distributive Justice in Early Modern England (Elizabeth Hanson) 9. Warding off Injustice in Book Five of The Faerie Queene (Judith Owens) 10. Torture and the Tyrant's Injustice from Foxe to King Lear (John D. Staines) 11. The Literatures of Toleration and Civil Religion in Post-Revolutionary England (Elliott Visconsi) 12. Obnoxious Satan: Milton, Neo-Roman Justice, and the Burden of Grace (Paul Stevens)