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Three Renaissance usury plays: The Ladies of London, Englishmen for My Money, Hog Hath Lost His Pearl

Three Renaissance usury plays: The Ladies of London, Englishmen for My Money, Hog Hath Lost His Pearl in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $140.00
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Three Renaissance usury plays: The Ladies of London, Englishmen for My Money, Hog Hath Lost His Pearl

Three Renaissance usury plays: The Ladies of London, Englishmen for My Money, Hog Hath Lost His Pearl in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $140.00
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Size: Hardcover

Get it at Barnes and Noble
This book provides for the first time modern-spelling, fully annotated editions of three important Elizabethan and Jacobean 'usury plays' – The Three Ladies of London, Englishmen for My Money, and The Hog Hath Lost His Pearl. The edition includes an extensive scholarly introduction to the attitudes toward money-lending in early modern England, and to the authors, texts and historical contexts of these dramas.
The plays included in this edition also represent examples of 'city plays' and 'alien plays', thus making them widely relevant to scholars and teachers in many areas of early modern studies. They are also gaining new appreciation in their own right.
As befits a volume in the RPCL series, the edition is academically advanced to cater for specialised scholars. However, the introduction, editing and annotation remain accessible for undergraduates and theatregoers.
This book provides for the first time modern-spelling, fully annotated editions of three important Elizabethan and Jacobean 'usury plays' – The Three Ladies of London, Englishmen for My Money, and The Hog Hath Lost His Pearl. The edition includes an extensive scholarly introduction to the attitudes toward money-lending in early modern England, and to the authors, texts and historical contexts of these dramas.
The plays included in this edition also represent examples of 'city plays' and 'alien plays', thus making them widely relevant to scholars and teachers in many areas of early modern studies. They are also gaining new appreciation in their own right.
As befits a volume in the RPCL series, the edition is academically advanced to cater for specialised scholars. However, the introduction, editing and annotation remain accessible for undergraduates and theatregoers.
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