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引用次数: 0
摘要
在17世纪中叶之前,随着对概率的理解的发展,赌博发生了变化,英国的赌博发生在社区,而不是像赌场这样的专门机构,因此代表了更普遍的社会行为并与之互动。不同的社区赌博方式不同;他们在法律上有不同的地位。本文探讨了绅士的赌博行为,认为在没有其他约束的情况下,荣誉观念在塑造这种行为方面发挥了关键作用。约翰·哈灵顿爵士(Sir John Harington)的《论赌博》(Treatise on play)等当代著作表明,高风险赌博属于人类学范畴的深度赌博,即赌徒押下巨额赌注,以赢得自己的大胆声誉;其次,这种行为似乎被视为年轻人的行为,年长的男性谴责过度赌博,因为随着他们成熟并融入社会,他们对什么是光荣的观念发生了变化。除了与年龄有关的赌博态度变化外,伊丽莎白时代的绅士赌博行为理想与个人赌徒的实际情况之间也存在紧张关系。有些人赌的钱有限,有些人赌的时间很少;来自温文尔雅家庭的年轻人有时会被聘为学徒,或者在改变他们与时间、金钱和监管的关系的情况下。因此,即使在伊丽莎白社会的这一单一部门内,对赌博的态度也变得高度复杂。
Before the mid-seventeenth century when a developing understanding of probability transformed gambling, English gaming took place in the community rather than in dedicated institutions like casinos and so represented and interacted with more general social behavior. Different communities gambled differently; they had different status under the law. This article considers gentlemen's gambling, arguing that in the absence of other constraints, notions of honor had a key role in shaping that activity. Contemporary accounts such as Sir John Harington's “Treatise on Playe” suggest that high-stakes wagering fell into the anthropological category of deep play, whereby gamesters staked excessive sums to win renown for their daring; secondly, it appears that such behavior was seen as a young man's activity, with older men condemning immoderate wagering as their ideas about what was honorable shifted as they matured and became integrated into the community. In addition to age-related changes of attitude to gambling, a tension existed between Elizabethan ideals of gentlemen's gambling behaviors and individual gamesters’ real circumstances. Some had limited money for wagering, others little time; youths from gentle families were sometimes indentured as apprentices or otherwise in situations that altered their relationships to time, money, and regulation. Consequently, even within this single sector of Elizabethan society, attitudes to gambling acquired a high level of complexity.
期刊介绍:
The official publication of the North American Conference on British Studies (NACBS), the Journal of British Studies, has positioned itself as the critical resource for scholars of British culture from the Middle Ages through the present. Drawing on both established and emerging approaches, JBS presents scholarly articles and books reviews from renowned international authors who share their ideas on British society, politics, law, economics, and the arts. In 2005 (Vol. 44), the journal merged with the NACBS publication Albion, creating one journal for NACBS membership. The NACBS also sponsors an annual conference , as well as several academic prizes, graduate fellowships, and undergraduate essay contests .