Form and Reform in Renaissance England: Essays in Honor of Barbara Kiefer LewalskiUniversity of Delaware Press, 2000 - 370 pàgines Written by scholars on both sides of the Atlantic, they reexamine the categories which have shaped recent studies of early modern culture and literature, such as what constitutes the category of author or reader, what demarcates a particular literary form, and how its discursive shape might influence, and in turn be influenced by, contemporary political practices."--BOOK JACKET. |
Continguts
7 | |
Nolls Nose or Body Politics in Cromwellian England | 21 |
Liberty of Conscience the Swarm | 45 |
Social Persons and | 70 |
The Rape of the Hearth | 104 |
Jonsons Family Values | 127 |
Invention Versus Dilation and | 153 |
A Tradition of Protestant | 171 |
Gender in the SelfRepresentations | 220 |
Ruling Women in Jacobean England | 247 |
A King James Bible Protestant Nationalism and Boy Milton | 271 |
Milton Marvell and the Politics | 288 |
A Rewriting of Spensers Den | 306 |
Samsons Sacrifice | 321 |
341 | |
A Bibliography | 363 |
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Form and Reform in Renaissance England: Essays in Honor of Barbara Kiefer ... Barbara Kiefer Lewalski Visualització de fragments - 2000 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
Aemilia Lanyer Andrew Marvell Anne annotations authority Barbara Lewalski Ben Jonson Bible body Brownists Cambridge University Charles Christ Christian church claim court Cromwell Cromwell's Culture death discourse Early Modern England edition Edmund Spenser Edwards Eikon Basilike elegy Elizabeth English essay father female figure gender genre God's grotesque body hath Ireland Irish Jacobean James John Milton Jonson Kevin Sharpe King king's Lady literary Literature Lock Lock's London Lord Lucrece Macbeth male Mariam Mary Wroth masque Meditation mother Muse nose Oxford Paradise Lost poem poet poetic poetry political Princeton Protestant Puritan Queen Rape Rape of Lucrece readers reading religious Renaissance rhetorical royalist Salve Deus Samson Samson Agonistes satire sectarian sects sermons Seventeenth-Century sexual Shakespeare social persons sonnet sovereignty speech Spenser Stephen Vaughan Steven Zwicker Studies swarm thee Thomas tion trope Tudor University Press verse Weston woman Women Writers writing York