Abstract
Close to the time of Elizabeth’s expulsion of the Hanseatic merchants and the closing of the Steelyard (der Stahlhof) in the years 1597-98, two London plays engaged extensively with the business of trade, the merchant class, foreign merchants, and moneylending: early modern England’s first city comedy, William Haughton’s Englishmen for My Money, or A Woman Will Have Her Will (1598); and Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice (registered 22 July 1598). Whereas Haughton’s play uses foreignness, embodied in a foreign merchant, three half-English daughters, and three foreign suitors, as a means of promoting national consciousness and pride, Shakespeare indirectly uses the foreign not to unify but to reveal the divisions within England’s own economic values and culture.
Publisher
Uniwersytet Lodzki (University of Lodz)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Language and Linguistics,Cultural Studies
Reference3 articles.
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2. Extending Credit in theHenry;Levine;Shakespeare Quarterly,2000
3. London s the Thing Alienation the Market andEnglishmen for My Money;Bartolovich;Huntington Library Quarterly,2008
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1 articles.
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