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The Moral Ecology of the Baroque: The Corruption Jurisprudence of the Imperial Aulic Council
The Moral Ecology of the Baroque: The Corruption Jurisprudence of the Imperial Aulic Counc...
The Moral Ecology of the Baroque: The Corruption Jurisprudence of the Imperial Aulic Council

상세정보

자료유형  
 학위논문 서양
최종처리일시  
20250211152651
ISBN  
9798384025344
DDC  
940
저자명  
Roethke, Peter.
서명/저자  
The Moral Ecology of the Baroque: The Corruption Jurisprudence of the Imperial Aulic Council
발행사항  
[Sl] : University of Pennsylvania, 2024
발행사항  
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2024
형태사항  
304 p
주기사항  
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 86-02, Section: A.
주기사항  
Advisor: Safley, Thomas Max.
학위논문주기  
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Pennsylvania, 2024.
초록/해제  
요약During a deposition at the Old Town Hall of Prague in 1608, the court chamberlain Philipp Lang argued that although he had taken bribes from the Count of Belgioioso, he had not been corrupted by him. The apparent contradiction is not an anomaly: early modern political actors operated within a normative framework vastly different from our own. And yet the world was not upside down; their matrix of moral decision-making encompassed the same competing imperatives that guide leaders today. My dissertation therefore asks, what exactly did early modern litigants understand by corruption? The question is salient to their time as well as our own because, like many abstract nouns, the term offers invaluable glimpses into the moral assumptions people hold but do not always say out loud. This work investigates the phenomenon of corruption through the case law of the Holy Roman Empire. The legal approach partly reflects my training as a lawyer, but also allows for full use of the micro-historical form. Because social norms are so deeply embedded within a particular context, micro history provides space for the 'thick description' essential to a capturing the multivalent nature of corruption as an arbiter of political ethics. My manuscript sources offer entry into what sociologists call the "labeling approach" - a method that focuses on the accuser rather than the perpetrator. Strung in a line chronologically, the five cases I analyze (1600-1780) traverse the institutional tenure of the court and weave the reciprocal encounters between petitioners and judges into a common fabric of jurisprudential change. Corruption is a phenomenon determined by what a given community subjectively considers to be reasonable. Every generation and every locality redefines wrongdoing for their own time and place. Shoehorned artfully into the archaic legal vocabulary of the baroque, the furious denunciations of wrongdoing analyzed in my dissertation state the opposite: certain eternal truths render corruption a sin. Paradoxically, all three claims are true. This dissertation exposes the diverse genealogies of "corruption" and the contradictory metamorphosis of the concept in that most contradictory of places, neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire.
일반주제명  
European history
일반주제명  
Political science
키워드  
Corruption
키워드  
Governance
키워드  
Holy Roman Empire
키워드  
Political ethics
키워드  
Reichshofrat
키워드  
Social norms
기타저자  
University of Pennsylvania History
기본자료저록  
Dissertations Abstracts International. 86-02A.
전자적 위치 및 접속  
로그인 후 원문을 볼 수 있습니다.

MARC

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■035    ▼a(MiAaPQ)AAI31486762
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■1001  ▼aRoethke,  Peter.
■24510▼aThe  Moral  Ecology  of  the  Baroque:  The  Corruption  Jurisprudence  of  the  Imperial  Aulic  Council
■260    ▼a[Sl]▼bUniversity  of  Pennsylvania▼c2024
■260  1▼aAnn  Arbor▼bProQuest  Dissertations  &  Theses▼c2024
■300    ▼a304  p
■500    ▼aSource:  Dissertations  Abstracts  International,  Volume:  86-02,  Section:  A.
■500    ▼aAdvisor:  Safley,  Thomas  Max.
■5021  ▼aThesis  (Ph.D.)--University  of  Pennsylvania,  2024.
■520    ▼aDuring  a  deposition  at  the  Old  Town  Hall  of  Prague  in  1608,  the  court  chamberlain  Philipp  Lang  argued  that  although  he  had  taken  bribes  from  the  Count  of  Belgioioso,  he  had  not  been  corrupted  by  him.  The  apparent  contradiction  is  not  an  anomaly:  early  modern  political  actors  operated  within  a  normative  framework  vastly  different  from  our  own.  And  yet  the  world  was  not  upside  down;  their  matrix  of  moral  decision-making  encompassed  the  same  competing  imperatives  that  guide  leaders  today.  My  dissertation  therefore  asks,  what  exactly  did  early  modern  litigants  understand  by  corruption?  The  question  is  salient  to  their  time  as  well  as  our  own  because,  like  many  abstract  nouns,  the  term  offers  invaluable  glimpses  into  the  moral  assumptions  people  hold  but  do  not  always  say  out  loud.  This  work  investigates  the  phenomenon  of  corruption  through  the  case  law  of  the  Holy  Roman  Empire.  The  legal  approach  partly  reflects  my  training  as  a  lawyer,  but  also  allows  for  full  use  of  the  micro-historical  form.  Because  social  norms  are  so  deeply  embedded  within  a  particular  context,  micro  history  provides  space  for  the  'thick  description'  essential  to  a  capturing  the  multivalent  nature  of  corruption  as  an  arbiter  of  political  ethics.  My  manuscript  sources  offer  entry  into  what  sociologists  call  the  "labeling  approach"  -  a  method  that  focuses  on  the  accuser  rather  than  the  perpetrator.  Strung  in  a  line  chronologically,  the  five  cases  I  analyze  (1600-1780)  traverse  the  institutional  tenure  of  the  court  and  weave  the  reciprocal  encounters  between  petitioners  and  judges  into  a  common  fabric  of  jurisprudential  change.  Corruption  is  a  phenomenon  determined  by  what  a  given  community  subjectively  considers  to  be  reasonable.  Every  generation  and  every  locality  redefines  wrongdoing  for  their  own  time  and  place.  Shoehorned  artfully  into  the  archaic  legal  vocabulary  of  the  baroque,  the  furious  denunciations  of  wrongdoing  analyzed  in  my  dissertation  state  the  opposite:  certain  eternal  truths  render  corruption  a  sin.  Paradoxically,  all  three  claims  are  true.  This  dissertation  exposes  the  diverse  genealogies  of  "corruption"  and  the  contradictory  metamorphosis  of  the  concept  in  that  most  contradictory  of  places,  neither  holy,  nor  Roman,  nor  an  empire.
■590    ▼aSchool  code:  0175.
■650  4▼aEuropean  history
■650  4▼aPolitical  science
■653    ▼aCorruption
■653    ▼aGovernance
■653    ▼aHoly  Roman  Empire
■653    ▼aPolitical  ethics
■653    ▼aReichshofrat
■653    ▼aSocial  norms
■690    ▼a0335
■690    ▼a0615
■71020▼aUniversity  of  Pennsylvania▼bHistory.
■7730  ▼tDissertations  Abstracts  International▼g86-02A.
■790    ▼a0175
■791    ▼aPh.D.
■792    ▼a2024
■793    ▼aEnglish
■85640▼uhttp://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T17163305▼nKERIS▼z이  자료의  원문은  한국교육학술정보원에서  제공합니다.

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