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Negotiating patronage: Nashe and his ‘toys for private gentlemen’

Abstract:
This chapter situates Nashe’s relationships with specific patrons, including the Carey family; Ferdinando Stanley, Lord Strange; and John Whitgift, Archbishop of Canterbury, within public networks of exchange and negotiation in the book trade. It argues that Nashe’s texts and paratexts function as transactional sites where private exchanges with patrons are repositioned as public and commercially marketable ones. In doing so, this chapter offers new ways of conceptualizing and ‘measuring’ patronage: as subject, as network, and as public text. While the influence of contemporary patrons on Nashe’s writing should not be overlooked, this chapter proposes a model of patronage that moves beyond a two-way system of exchange to take account of multiple agents and sites of interaction that shape the interpretation of Nashe’s texts and the life of a ‘professional’ writer in Elizabethan England.
Publication status:
Accepted
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
HUMS
Department:
English Faculty
Oxford college:
Jesus College
Role:
Author

Contributors

Role:
Editor
Role:
Editor
Role:
Editor


Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Host title:
The Oxford Handbook of Thomas Nashe
Series:
Oxford Handbooks
Place of publication:
Oxford
Acceptance date:
2023-07-31
Edition:
1


Language:
English
Keywords:
Subtype:
Chapter
Pubs id:
1511675
Local pid:
pubs:1511675
Deposit date:
2023-08-19

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