Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Acknowledgments
- English revenge plays discussed in this book
- Standard MLA abbreviations for Shakespeare's plays
- Note on the text
- PART I RAMPANT REVENGE
- PART II ECONOMIC UNFAIRNESS: REVENGE AND MONEY
- PART III POLITICAL UNFAIRNESS: REVENGE AND RESISTANCE
- PART IV SOCIAL UNFAIRNESS: VENGEANCE AND EQUALITY
- 9 Revenge and class warfare
- 10 Quantification revisited: revenge and social equality
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
10 - Quantification revisited: revenge and social equality
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Acknowledgments
- English revenge plays discussed in this book
- Standard MLA abbreviations for Shakespeare's plays
- Note on the text
- PART I RAMPANT REVENGE
- PART II ECONOMIC UNFAIRNESS: REVENGE AND MONEY
- PART III POLITICAL UNFAIRNESS: REVENGE AND RESISTANCE
- PART IV SOCIAL UNFAIRNESS: VENGEANCE AND EQUALITY
- 9 Revenge and class warfare
- 10 Quantification revisited: revenge and social equality
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The desire for revenge
Is in the children of a tender age.
LocrineWhy were revenge plays so useful for exploring egalitarianism? The answer returns us to mathematics and quantification. Enamored of systems in balance – equations, double-entry bookkeeping, balance of trade, equally matched armies arranged in squares, the body's balanced humors, architectural symmetry – the age was starting to identify fairness with equal-sidedness. And revenge was symmetrical. A perfectly executed condign revenge was beautiful, with the bilateral symmetry of high Renaissance architecture – the Strozzi Palace in Florence, England's Longleat. The medieval word for beautiful, “fair,” came also in the Renaissance to mean “free from … injustice; equitable, legitimate” (OED). Fairness in human conduct was beautiful; and injustice could be re-beautified – made symmetrical, equitable – by compensatory action: an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.
Even such humble texts as William Scott's Essay on Drapery idealized bilateral equality. Trade's purpose was “the good of both parties,” a fair deal for buyer and seller: “If the price exceed the worth of the thing, or the thing exceed the price, the equality of justice is taken away” (18). Fairness meant equal satisfaction: “In the buying and selling of commodities,” a price is “agreed upon between both parties,” reflecting “equality in the value of things” (Malynes, Lex 91). Like an equation, ledger, or symmetrical palace, a mutually satisfactory commercial transaction embodied an ideal of balance.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- English Revenge DramaMoney, Resistance, Equality, pp. 254 - 270Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010