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“The broken schippus he ther fonde”: Shipwrecks and the Human Costs of Investment Capital in Middle English Romance
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Richmond, Andrew M. (Author)
Title
“The broken schippus he ther fonde”: Shipwrecks and the Human Costs of Investment Capital in Middle English Romance
Abstract
Featuring prominently in the romance imagination as terrifying obstacles in the hero’s path, shipwrecks are nevertheless often presented from the salvager’s perspective. Romances abound with knights, clerks, and merchants who obsessively observe nearby beaches and cautiously (yet excitedly) examine the contents of wrecked vessels. Washed ashore, such fruits of maritime disaster delineate medieval English conceptions of seashores as dangerous yet profitable spaces, wherein seaside harvests of (un)natural resources help to stimulate local economic networks. Designations of these shipwrecks as “magical” or “fortuitous” cannot, however, completely elide the source of such wealth in others’ suffering—an unavoidable implication that interrogates contemporary means of attaining investment capital. As such, this paper examines how the littoral space of the seashore is cast as a source of perilous and problematic material bounty in many Middle English romances.
Publication
Neophilologus
Date
2015-04-01
Volume
99
Issue
2
Pages
315-333
Journal Abbr
Neophilologus
Citation Key
richmondBrokenSchippusHe2015
Accessed
10/31/24, 5:30 PM
ISSN
1572-8668
Short Title
“The broken schippus he ther fonde”
Language
en
Library Catalog
Springer Link
Citation
Richmond, A. M. (2015). “The broken schippus he ther fonde”: Shipwrecks and the Human Costs of Investment Capital in Middle English Romance. Neophilologus, 99(2), 315–333. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11061-014-9423-3
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