Front cover image for The establishment of modern English prose in the Reformation and the Enlightenment

The establishment of modern English prose in the Reformation and the Enlightenment

Ian Robinson traces the legacy of prose writing as a form distinct from verse. Engaging with histories of rhetoric and the work of the great prose writers, Robinson provides a bold reappraisal of this literary form, and shows how the sentence itself is historically conditioned and no older than the post-medieval world.
Print Book, English, 1998
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1998
XV, 218 p. 24 cm
9780521480888, 0521480884
1014962906
1. Sentence and period; 2. Prose rhythm; 3. Syntax and period in Middle English; 4. Cranmer's commonwealth; 5. Shakespeare vs the Wanderers; 6. Dryden's democracy; 7. The prose world; Appendices.