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Economies of Praise

Ryan Netzley

Value, Labor, and Form in Seventeenth-Century English Poetry

Barcode 9780810146709
Hardback

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Release Date: 31/03/2024

Genre: Poetry & Drama
Sub-Genre: Literary Criticism
Label: Northwestern University Press
Series: Rethinking the Early Modern
Language: English
Publisher: Northwestern University Press

Value, Labor, and Form in Seventeenth-Century English Poetry
Reevaluates early modern poems of praise as, paradoxically, challenging an artistic economy that values exchange and productivity. Explores how poems of praise imagine alternatives to market and gift economies and point instead to a self-contained aesthetic economy that works against a more expansive and productivist understanding of literary art.
Reevaluates early modern poems of praise as, paradoxically, challenging an artistic economy that values exchange and productivity

Early modern poems of praise typically insist that they do not have a purpose or enact real labor beyond their effortless listing of laudable qualities. And yet the poets discussed in this study, including Ben Jonson, Andrew Marvell, Anne Bradstreet, Lucy Hutchinson, and John Milton, hint at an alternative aesthetic economy at work in their verse. Poetic praise, it turns out, might show us a social world outside the organizing principle of exchange.

In Economies of Praise: Value, Labor, and Form in Seventeenth‑Century English Poetry, Ryan Netzley explores how poems of praise imagine alternatives to market and gift economies and point instead to a self-contained aesthetic economy that works against a more expansive and productivist understanding of literary art. By depicting exchange as inconsequential, unproductive, and redundant rather than a necessary constituent of social order, these poems model for modern readers a world without the imperative to create, appraise, and repeatedly demonstrate one’s own value.