Becoming Criminal: Transversal Performance and Cultural Dissidence in Early Modern England

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JHU Press, 2002 M03 29 - 217 pages

In this book Bryan Reynolds argues that early modern England experienced a sociocultural phenomenon, unprecedented in English history, which has been largely overlooked by historians and critics. Beginning in the 1520s, a distinct "criminal culture" of beggars, vagabonds, confidence tricksters, prostitutes, and gypsies emerged and flourished. This community defined itself through its criminal conduct and dissident thought and was, in turn,officially defined by and against the dominant conceptions of English cultural normality.

Examining plays, popular pamphlets, laws, poems, and scholarly work from the period, Reynolds demonstrates that this criminal culture, though diverse, was united by its own ideology, language, and aesthetic. Using his transversal theory, he shows how the enduring presence of this criminal culture markedly influenced the mainstream culture's aesthetic sensibilities, socioeconomic organization, and systems of belief. He maps the effects of the public theater's transformative force of transversality, such as through the criminality represented by Shakespeare, Jonson, Middleton, and Dekker, on both Elizabethan and Jacobean society and the scholarship devoted to it.

 

Contents

State Power Cultural Dissidence Transversal Power
1
Becoming Gypsy Criminal Culture Becoming Transversal
23
Communal Departure Criminal Language Dissident Consolidation
64
Social Spatialization Criminal Praxis Transversal Movement
95
Antitheatrical Discourse Transversal Theater Criminal Intervention
125
Notes
157
Bibliography
197
Index
209
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About the author (2002)

Bryan Reynolds is an associate professor of drama at the University of California, Irvine.

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