Abstract: Although more known for its representation of Henry V as a charismatic king with a common touch, Shakespeare's Henry V juxtaposes the feudal order with early capitalist relations secured by payment and exchange. Allusions to money and acknowledgment of the theater as a commercial space call into question the primacy of a mystical economy flowing from the king's body. This essay draws on affect theory, alchemical discourse, and new economic criticism to argue that Henry V offers the playhouse as an alternative model of affective economy. History produced in the playhouse writes the commons into popular memory, contesting the elite biases of prose historiography, supplementing the losses of pre-Reformation communal experience, and insisting on the economic, affective, and political significance of common lives.
Tracey Miller‐Tomlinson (Sun,) studied this question.