The Changing Face of Property: Land and Bodies in Early Modern English Literature and Contemporary Legal Trends

Early Modern drama, particularly that of Thomas Middleton, John Webster, and Ben Jonson, reveal the importance of property law in England in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Their treatment of property law not only reflects and comments on the changes in property law and contract...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Saint Marie, Katina
Other Authors: Rowe, George
Language:en_US
Published: University of Oregon 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19326
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spelling ndltd-uoregon.edu-oai-scholarsbank.uoregon.edu-1794-193262019-01-09T17:15:14Z The Changing Face of Property: Land and Bodies in Early Modern English Literature and Contemporary Legal Trends Saint Marie, Katina Rowe, George Child labor Contract Drama Early modern Feminist Property Early Modern drama, particularly that of Thomas Middleton, John Webster, and Ben Jonson, reveal the importance of property law in England in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Their treatment of property law not only reflects and comments on the changes in property law and contract law of the period, but, in many surprising ways, it also anticipates our twentieth- and twenty-first-century discussions of property law as it pertains to property in the person. In much the same way that Early Modern persons debated the limitations and moral implications of private property, we today struggle to understand the limitations and moral implications of property in our bodies. Although these issues have universal importance, they are particularly relevant to women because women, from the early days of the sixteenth century through our contemporary period, have been and continue to be denied rights to property in one way or another. This dissertation explores the drama through the lenses of Early Modern English law, contemporary Western law, feminist philosophy, and literary analysis, and an examination of the plays reveals that women have a property interest in reproductive labor such as gestation, child labor, and child birth. These property interests are relevant to contracts regarding reproductive technologies, paternity law, and doctrines of informed consent, and they also provide a more robust set of rights that protect women from over-reaching state action. 10000-01-01 2015-08-18T23:11:44Z 2015-08-18 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19326 en_US All Rights Reserved. University of Oregon
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Child labor
Contract
Drama
Early modern
Feminist
Property
spellingShingle Child labor
Contract
Drama
Early modern
Feminist
Property
Saint Marie, Katina
The Changing Face of Property: Land and Bodies in Early Modern English Literature and Contemporary Legal Trends
description Early Modern drama, particularly that of Thomas Middleton, John Webster, and Ben Jonson, reveal the importance of property law in England in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Their treatment of property law not only reflects and comments on the changes in property law and contract law of the period, but, in many surprising ways, it also anticipates our twentieth- and twenty-first-century discussions of property law as it pertains to property in the person. In much the same way that Early Modern persons debated the limitations and moral implications of private property, we today struggle to understand the limitations and moral implications of property in our bodies. Although these issues have universal importance, they are particularly relevant to women because women, from the early days of the sixteenth century through our contemporary period, have been and continue to be denied rights to property in one way or another. This dissertation explores the drama through the lenses of Early Modern English law, contemporary Western law, feminist philosophy, and literary analysis, and an examination of the plays reveals that women have a property interest in reproductive labor such as gestation, child labor, and child birth. These property interests are relevant to contracts regarding reproductive technologies, paternity law, and doctrines of informed consent, and they also provide a more robust set of rights that protect women from over-reaching state action. === 10000-01-01
author2 Rowe, George
author_facet Rowe, George
Saint Marie, Katina
author Saint Marie, Katina
author_sort Saint Marie, Katina
title The Changing Face of Property: Land and Bodies in Early Modern English Literature and Contemporary Legal Trends
title_short The Changing Face of Property: Land and Bodies in Early Modern English Literature and Contemporary Legal Trends
title_full The Changing Face of Property: Land and Bodies in Early Modern English Literature and Contemporary Legal Trends
title_fullStr The Changing Face of Property: Land and Bodies in Early Modern English Literature and Contemporary Legal Trends
title_full_unstemmed The Changing Face of Property: Land and Bodies in Early Modern English Literature and Contemporary Legal Trends
title_sort changing face of property: land and bodies in early modern english literature and contemporary legal trends
publisher University of Oregon
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19326
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