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Gambling with Women, Estates and Status in Long Eighteenth Century Comedy

Beth Cortese, ‘Gambling with Women, Estates and Status in Long Eighteenth Century Comedy’ (Special Journal Issue ‘Playing, Gambling and Cheating in Early Modern England and France’ in Etudes Epistémè 39, edited by Line Cottegnies and Louise Fang, Published July 2021)

Summary:
This article discusses gambling and inheritance as two types of property transfer presented on the long eighteenth-century stage and investigates the relationship each has with gender and social status. Comparing Aphra Behn’s The Lucky Chance (1685) with Susanna Centlivre’s The Basset Table (1705), I show the different attitudes exhibited toward gambling from the aristocratic male and female, and the middle-class female gambler. I argue that gambling provided individuals, and in particular married women, with a different relationship to property, enabling them to participate in the credit economy, manipulating their position as their husband’s property under coverture to transfer debt to their husband as an alternative form of inheritance.  

Link to:
Gambling with Women, Estates and Status in Long Eighteenth Century Comedy