Women, the Republic of Letters, and the Public Sphere in the Mid-Seventeenth Century

Criticism ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 223-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Norbrook
Author(s):  
Catherine Rockwood

This chapter summarizes the historical reputation of Ben Jonson’s final works for the public stage during the late Jacobean era and the beginning of the Caroline period, c.1616–37. It incorporates current lines of research and discussion into a reading of each text, and argues for their particular value as examples of acute, sometimes critical, always entertaining dramatic commentary on early modern mores and topical subjects. It suggests, with specific reference to The Staple of News (1626) and A Tale of A Tub (1633), that Jonson paid continued and visible attention to his role and responsibilities as an author positioned at the intersection of the public sphere and the republic of letters.


2014 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 590-617 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Bouldin

The mobility and literacy of many seventeenth- and eighteenth-century dissenters allowed for the circulation of people and ideas throughout Europe, the British Isles, and colonial North America. This article focuses on the interactions of dissenting groups who flourished in the half century between the Restoration and the Great Awakening, such as English Philadelphians, French Prophets, radical German Pietists, Quakers, Bourignonians, and Labadists. It considers how a push for further reforms, particularly those arising from the context of late seventeenth-century millenarianism, served as a catalyst for radical Protestants to seek out other dissenters with the goal of uniting communities of reformers across linguistic, confessional, and geographic boundaries. Dissenters facilitated their endeavors through the development of new sites of sociability, a reliance on implicit codes of expected behavior, and the circulation of manuscript and printed texts. By relying on mechanisms of the public sphere, they carried out esoteric conversations and critical debates about radical Protestantism.


2020 ◽  
pp. 224-228
Author(s):  
Emmanuel Taïeb

This concluding chapter summarizes the key points of the book. The year 1939, when executions moved behind prison walls and thus definitively exited the public stage, marked the beginning of remote governance, a new stage in the transformation of the public sphere: power no longer had to manifest itself directly, but could instead use various media platforms to assert itself. The disappearance of public executions also signaled the advent of the civilizing process, which sought to conceal anything that might provoke anxiety or negative emotions. The criticism levied at, and the final disappearance of, public executions illustrates a historical moment when a technology of power was gradually modified, eliminated, and concealed thanks to the efforts of the elites as well as, most likely, to the efforts of executionary spectators, because the emotions that executions unleashed were in contradiction with society's desire to reject violence. The elimination of publicity did not resolve the problem of violence in the Republic nor immediately solve the issue of the death penalty, which would drag on for another four decades, but it did demonstrate that people were no longer willing to tolerate a certain kind of state violence. It also revealed a phase in the evolution of the psychological landscape in which self-control came to be determined by the authorities and their instruments.


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