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The Power of Gifts - Gift Exchange in Early Modern England (Hardcover)
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The Power of Gifts - Gift Exchange in Early Modern England (Hardcover)
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Gifts are always with us: we use them positively to display
affection and show gratitude for favours; we suspect that others
give and accept them as douceurs and bribes. The gift also
performed these roles in early modern English culture: and assumed
a more significant role because networks of informal support and
patronage were central to social and political behaviour. Favours,
and their proper acknowledgement, were preoccupations of the age of
Erasmus, Shakespeare, and Hobbes. As in modern society, giving and
receiving was complex and full of the potential for social damage.
'Almost nothing', men of the Renaissance learned from that great
classical guide to morality, Lucius Annaeus Seneca, 'is more
disgraceful than the fact that we do not know how either to give or
receive benefits'. The Power of Gifts is about those gifts and
benefits - what they were, and how they were offered and received
in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. It shows that the mode
of giving, as well as what was given, was crucial to social bonding
and political success. The volume moves from a general
consideration of the nature of the gift to an exploration of the
politics of giving. In the latter chapters some of the well-known
rituals of English court life - the New Year ceremony, royal
progresses, diplomatic missions - are viewed through the prism of
gift-exchange. Gifts to monarchs or their ministers could focus
attention on the donor, those from the crown could offer some
assurance of favour. These fundamentals remained the same
throughout the century and a half before the Civil War, but the
attitude of individual monarchs altered specific behaviour.
Elizabeth expected to be wooed with gifts and dispensed benefits
largely for service rendered, James I modelled giving as the
largesse of the Renaissance prince, Charles I's gift-exchanges
focused on the art collecting of his coterie. And always in both
politics and the law courts there was the danger that gifts would
be corroded, morphing from acceptable behaviour into bribes and
corruption. The Power of Gifts explores prescriptive literature,
pamphlets, correspondence, legal cases and financial records, to
illuminate social attitudes and behaviour through a rich series of
examples and case-studies.
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