Wayward Contracts: The Crisis of Political Obligation in England, 1640-1674 by Victoria Kahn
392 pages | Princeton University Press | 2004 | ISBN: 069111773X | PDF | 15.2 MB
Why did the language of contract become the dominant metaphor for the
relationship between subject and sovereign in mid-seventeenth-century
England? In Wayward Contracts, Victoria Kahn takes issue with the usual
explanation for the emergence of contract theory in terms of the origins
of liberalism, with its notions of autonomy, liberty, and equality
before the law.
Drawing on literature as well as political theory, state trials as well
as religious debates, Kahn argues that the sudden prominence of contract
theory was part of the linguistic turn of early modern culture, when
government was imagined in terms of the poetic power to bring new
artifacts into existence. But this new power also brought in its wake a
tremendous anxiety about the contingency of obligation and the
instability of the passions that induce individuals to consent to a
sovereign power. In this wide-ranging analysis of the cultural
significance of contract theory, the lover and the slave, the tyrant and
the regicide, the fool and the liar emerge as some of the central, if
wayward, protagonists of the new theory of political obligation. The
result is must reading for students and scholars of early modern
literature and early modern political theory, as well as historians of
political thought and of liberalism.
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