This book examines the central role of casuistry - the science of resolving problems of moral choice, known as 'cases of conscience' - in Elizabethan religious, political, and literary culture. In the process, that author develops a theory of casuistical hermeneutics in a synthesis of new historicist and post-structuralist methodologies, a synthesis made intelligible in terms applied within the discourses of ideological and epistemological crisis that late-sixteenth-century casuiatry both addressed and provoked. Casuistry gained unprecedented notoriety in the last two decades of Elizabeth's reign, emerging as an ambiguous practice that continued to be claimed as a heuristic procedure while it also came to function as a locus of moral and epistemological uncertainty. The author shows the equivocal nature of casuistry to be the effect of the inherently dialogic activity of the word 'conscience'. Believed to be a sacred repository of truth as well as a hermeneutic operation, conscience both embodied the culture's received norms and subjected to scrutiny the social and political negotiations that produced and maintained these norms. The author examines the application of casuistry in wide-ranging but interrelated documents: Elizabeth's two speeches to Parliament concerning the fate of Mary, Queen of Scots; representative manuals of casuistry; accounts of the secret movements of the English Catholic mission and Walsingham's intelligence network; the 'Siena Sieve' portrait of Spencer's The Faerie Queene. The author establishes casuistical hermeneutics as a central organizing principle of Spenserian narrative and charts the connection between Spenserian narrative and novelistic discourse (in Bakhtin's sense of the term). These documents yield new insights into the politics of ambiguity and misreading in the Elizabethan period, variously exploiting the casuistical doctrines of equivocation, 'honest dissimulation', and mental reservation, as well as what the author calls the rhetoric of inviolability, which was associated with the voice of conscience and appropriated by monarch and dissidents alike. T hat rhetoric depended on a politic self-censorship that proved indispensable to the maintenance of the culture's norms, producing narrative structures that represent scandalous - and theoretically unrepresentable - insights. Reading the text of casuistry in the Renaissance illumines the pivotal, complementary processes of reading and writing the texts through which Elizabethan culture defined itself - its texts of power, its hierarchy of values and norms, its taboos, and its tacit or naturalized protocol for determining canonical texts and 'good' readings.<
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'Like some of the best recent new historicist studies, this book begins with historical investigation, saying a lot that is new and fascinating about the political world of Elizabethan England. Casuistry is acutely analyzed as an instrument of pastoral care, a colonizing agent (i.e., an instrument of social and political control), and an epistemological procedure focusing on the difficult boundary between culpability and innocence. The history in this study is new and compelling. The language of analysis is perceptive and rigorous, based on real learning.' David Bevington, University of Chicago
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Seller: Harry Alter, Sylva, NC, U.S.A.
hardcover, Condition: Very Good, Stanford University Press, 1991, 1st., 8vo., cloth, 331pp., NF/NF $. Seller Inventory # 86406
Seller: MW Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition. Fine cloth copy in a fine, very slightly edge-dulled dust wrapper. Well-preserved overall. Physical description; 331 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm. Subjects; English literature Early modern, 1500-1700 History and criticism. Casuistry in literature. Renaissance England. 1 Kg. Seller Inventory # 464141
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Hardcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. Book & D.J. are in a good condition. Seller Inventory # 003109
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Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. hardback, octavo, a very good tightly bound copy with a clean and unmarked text and in a well preserved pictorial dust jacket. Colour frontis, 331pp. Seller Inventory # 289193
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Hardback. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. First edition. 1st 1991. Very good condition in a very good dustwrapper. Examining the central role of casuistry in Elizabethan religions, political, and literary culture. Black cloth boards, red title to spine. Colour frontis. Some mottling to boards. Text block slightly grubby, contents clean. Black pictorial dustwrapper is scuffed to rear panel and some foxing to verso. Packaged with care and promptly dispatched! Seller Inventory # 1819661
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Original publisher's black cloth hardback, gilt lettering spine, pictorial dustjacket, 8vo: frontispiece, [viij], 332pp., chapternotes & references, general bibliography, index, colophon. Very fine copy. Seller Inventory # 156755
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Seller: MW Books Ltd., Galway, Ireland
First Edition. Fine cloth copy in a fine, very slightly edge-dulled dust wrapper. Well-preserved overall. Physical description; 331 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm. Subjects; English literature Early modern, 1500-1700 History and criticism. Casuistry in literature. Renaissance England. 1 Kg. Seller Inventory # 464141