True Relations: Reading, Literature, and Evidence in Seventeenth-Century England

Overview

In the motley ranks of seventeenth-century print, one often comes upon the title True Relation. Purportedly true relations describe monsters, miracles, disasters, crimes, trials, and apparitions. They also convey discoveries achieved through exploration or experiment. Contemporaries relied on such accounts for access to information even as they distrusted them; scholars today share both their dependency and their doubt. What we take as evidence, Frances E. Dolan argues, often raises more questions than it ...

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True Relations: Reading, Literature, and Evidence in Seventeenth-Century England

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Overview

In the motley ranks of seventeenth-century print, one often comes upon the title True Relation. Purportedly true relations describe monsters, miracles, disasters, crimes, trials, and apparitions. They also convey discoveries achieved through exploration or experiment. Contemporaries relied on such accounts for access to information even as they distrusted them; scholars today share both their dependency and their doubt. What we take as evidence, Frances E. Dolan argues, often raises more questions than it answers. Although historians have tracked dramatic changes in evidentiary standards and practices in the period, these changes did not solve the problem of how to interpret true relations or ease the reliance on them. The burden remains on readers.

Dolan connects early modern debates about textual evidence to recent discussions of the value of seventeenth-century texts as historical evidence. Then as now, she contends, literary techniques of analysis have proven central to staking and assessing truth claims. She addresses the kinds of texts that circulated about three traumatic events—the Gunpowder Plot, witchcraft prosecutions, and the London Fire—and looks at legal depositions, advice literature, and plays as genres of evidence that hover in a space between fact and fiction. Even as doubts linger about their documentary and literary value, scholars rely heavily on them. Confronting and exploring these doubts, Dolan makes a case for owning up to our agency in crafting true relations among the textual fragments that survive.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher
"True Relations pairs a methodological inquiry with historical analysis of specific case histories connecting fact to fiction in the early modern period. No other book to date has traced the particular way that scholars of the early modern period devise a practice of reading once they affirm the axiom that the 'real' is constructed. Dolan offers an unusually lucid and crisp tour of the social stakes involved in reading strategies and evidentiary standards."—Wendy Wall, Northwestern University
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780812244854
  • Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
  • Publication date: 2/18/2013
  • Pages: 344
  • Sales rank: 1,151,531
  • Product dimensions: 6.20 (w) x 9.00 (h) x 1.20 (d)

Meet the Author

Frances E. Dolan is Professor of English at the University of California, Davis. She is also author of Marriage and Violence: The Early Modern Legacy, available from the University of Pennsylvania Press, as well as Dangerous Familiars: Representations of Domestic Crime in England, 1550-1700 and Whores of Babylon: Catholicism, Gender, and Seventeenth-Century Print Culture.

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Table of Contents

Note on Spelling Introduction

PART I. CRISES OF EVIDENCE Chapter 1. True and Perfect Relations: Henry Garnet, Confessional Identity, and Figuration Chapter 2. Sham Stories and Credible Relations: Witchcraft and Narrative Conventions Chapter 3. A True and Faithful Account? The London Fire, Blame, and Partisan Proof

PART II. GENRES OF EVIDENCE Chapter 4. First-Person Relations: Reading Depositions Chapter 5. The Rule of Relation: Domestic Advice Literature and Its Readers Chapter 6. Relational Truths: Dramatic Evidence, All Is True, and Double Falsehood

Notes Index Acknowledgments

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