Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 2009 39(2):375-406; DOI:10.1215/10829636-2008-026
Duke University Press
Cockfighting as Cultural Allegory in Early Modern England
Thomas A. Hamill
Wilkes University Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
This essay examines the ways in which cockfighting in early modern England operates as an allegorical mode, as a trope for conscribing social relations and phenomena as distinct as male subject-formation and the realization of eschatological truth. Focusing on two distinct cockfighting texts (one that promotes the virtues of cockfighting as a sport and another that figures cockfighting as an extension of animal husbandry), the essay maps the range of cultural and behavioral practices that early modern cockfighting discourse makes possible. Located in allegories of the cockfight are conflicting systems of meaning that at once affirm and disrupt anthropological distinctions between human and animal activity and the anthropocentric ideologies that construct such demarcations. Reading the early modern cockfight challenges us to critique how we engage sport, early modern culture, animals, and allegory itself as signifying texts.

CiteULike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati What's this?
Copyright 2009 by Duke University Press