ABSTRACT

Desires of Credit in Early Modern Theory and Drama traces the near-simultaneous rise of economic theory, literary criticism, and public theater in London at the turn of the seventeenth century, and posits that connecting all three is a fascination with creating something out of nothing simply by acting as if it were there. Author Brian Sheerin contends that the motivating force behind both literary and economic inquiry at this time was the same basic quandary about the human imagination--specifically, how investments of belief can produce tangible consequences. Just as speculators were realizing the potency of collective imagination on economic circulation, readers and dramatists were becoming newly introspective about whether or not the 'lies' of literature could actually be morally 'profitable.' Could one actually benefit by taking certain fictions 'seriously'? Each of the five chapters examines a different dimension of this question by highlighting a particular dramatization of economic trust on the Renaissance stage, in plays by Marlowe, Shakespeare, Heywood, Dekker, and Jonson. The book fills a gap in current scholarship by keeping economic and dramatic interests rigorously grounded in early modern literary criticism, but also by emphasizing the productive nature of debt in a way that resonates with recent economic sociology.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

chapter |30 pages

The Profitable Imagination

Poesy, Coinage, and the Hermeneutic Circles of Marlowe's Doctor Faustus

chapter |20 pages

The Jewish Economies of Renaissance Reading

Putting Shylock to Good Use in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice

chapter |20 pages

Imaginative Alchemy and the Face of the Sovereign

Locating Value in Dekker's Old Fortunatus

chapter |19 pages

Banking and the Allure of Belief

Bad Credit in Jonson's Volpone

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion