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E-raamat: Imperial Ventures: Maritime Drama and the Invention of Risk

  • Formaat: 336 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Feb-2025
  • Kirjastus: University of Pennsylvania Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781512827002
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  • Formaat: 336 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Feb-2025
  • Kirjastus: University of Pennsylvania Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781512827002

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Links early modern English drama and empire studies, exploring how staged scenes of maritime peril created a new form of economic uncertainty

Imperial Ventures links early modern English drama and empire studies, exploring how staged scenes of maritime peril created a new form of economic uncertainty around the turn of the seventeenth century, amid London’s explosion in commercial colonialism.

While the hazards of global maritime trade became increasingly apparent during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, the word “risk” did not enter English usage until around 1660. The prevailing scholarly narrative has linked uncertainty to concepts such as “chance,” “accident,” and “providence,” but this book reveals that these fragmentary concepts were reordered into an economic abstraction, and that the theater was a key site for that process. Playwrights reached for ways to represent this new uncertainty, and audiences watched perilous voyages set in colonial contexts and dramatized in increasingly typical forms. Imperial Ventures is organized by these forms, with five chapters examining scenes of shipwreck, pirates, enslavement, colonial subjection, and perilous news across a wide range of early modern plays.

Benjamin VanWagoner shows how maritime drama connected English venturing to economic vulnerability in increasingly systematic ways, helping to develop the economic logic that would come to be codified as risk. In revealing this process, Imperial Ventures establishes the unique protocolonial status of early modern England—in the theater and at sea—and demonstrates how risk became a perverse instrument for justifying Anglophone imperialism.

Arvustused

"In the midst of twenty-first-century refugee crises, climate migrations, and supply-chain volatility, Benjamin VanWagoner's study of the early modern history of maritime risk and theatrical performance is both timely and keenly illuminating. Offering incisive case studies of a corpus of maritime plays and venturing documents, this provocative book demonstrates the theater's contributions to a 'cultural archaeology' of risk punctuated by shipwreck, pirates, enslavement, and subjection." (Jane Hwang Degenhardt, author of Globalizing Fortune on the Early Modern Stage) "Imperial Ventures is a path-breaking study of early modern postcolonialism, examining how risk animated both economic discourses and dramatic representations of peril at sea. The strength of this book lies in its fresh readings of familiar plays as they dramatize the risks and challenges of the new maritime economy buttressing England's imperialist drives." (Jyotsna G. Singh, author of Shakespeare and Postcolonial Theory) "This excellent and erudite book reconsiders early modern maritime drama in terms of imperialism and colonial expansion, brilliantly bringing together new developments in critical thinking about race, slavery, economic risk, and related areas. Anyone interested in oceanic cultures, early modern globalization, ecological imperialism, or the blue humanities should read this book!" (Steve Mentz, author of Shipwreck Modernity: Ecologies of Globalization, 15501719)

Muu info

Benjamin VanWagoner shows how early modern maritime drama connected English venturing to economic vulnerability, helping to develop the economic logic that would come to be codified as risk. In revealing this process, Imperial Ventures demonstrates how risk became a perverse instrument for justifying Anglophone imperialism.
Benjamin VanWagoner lives in New York.