University of Delaware Press
The Time Is Out Of Joint: Skepticism In Shakespeare's England
The Time Is Out Of Joint: Skepticism In Shakespeare's England
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The final decades of the sixteenth century brought tumultuous change in England. Bitter disputes concerning religious reformation divided Catholics and Protestants, radical reformers and religious conservatives. The Church of England won the loyalty of many, but religious and political dissent continued. Social and economic change also created anxiety as social mobility, unemployment, riots, and rebellions exposed the weakness of an ideology of order. The Time is Out of Joint: Skepticism in Shakespeare's England situates the work of four skepticsReginald Scot, Thomas Harriot, Christopher Marlowe, and William Shakespearewithin the context of religious and social change. These four writers responded to the dislocations that upset the stability of the newly formed Protestant nation by raising bold and often disturbing questions about religion and epistemology. The historical tropes covered in this bookwitchcraft debates, New World discovery, economic struggle, and religious reformationreveal the diverse contexts in which skepticism appeared and the many contributions skepticism made to a nation undergoing radical change.