Images of Matter: Essays on British Literature of the Middle Ages and Renaissance : Proceedings of the Eighth Citadel Conference on Literature, Charleston, South Carolina, 2002Yvonne Bruce University of Delaware Press, 2005 - 283 Seiten Itineraries, perambulations, and surveys : the intersections of chorography and cartography in the sixteenth century / John M. Adrian -- To serve my purpose : interpretive agency in George Wither's A collection of emblemes / Rob Browning -- The three noble kinsmen : Chaucer, Shakespeare, Fletcher / Kathryn L. Lynch -- Ovid and the question of politics in early modern England / Heather James -- Parodies lost : Aretino reads Raimondi /Helen M. Whall -- Accepting the flesh : George Herbert and the sacrament of Holy Communion / Jeannie Sargent Judge -- Twixt treason and convenience : some images of Thomas Wentworth, first Earl of Strafford / Julia B. Griffin -- Backbiters, flatterers, and monarchs : domestic politics in The tragedy of Mariam / Heather E. Ostman -- Gender and the market in Henry VI, I / Jennifer A. Rich -- Hrethel's heirloom : kinship, succession, and weaponry in Beowulf / Erin Mullally -- Shylock : Shakespeare's bad Jew / Jay L. Halio -- Coping with providentialism : trauma, identity, and the failure of the English Reformation / Scott Lucas. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 34
Seite 24
... never obviously — from the theory and interdisciplinari- anism characteristic of humanities scholarship in the 1980s and 1990s , examines the maternal heirloom culture of Beowulf . Depart- ing from the traditional scholarship of gift ...
... never obviously — from the theory and interdisciplinari- anism characteristic of humanities scholarship in the 1980s and 1990s , examines the maternal heirloom culture of Beowulf . Depart- ing from the traditional scholarship of gift ...
Seite 32
... never truly escape the political and ideological conditions from which they arise , they at least attempt to appear ahistorical , technical , and objective . Because chorographers endeavor to " make the land speak " in- stead of simply ...
... never truly escape the political and ideological conditions from which they arise , they at least attempt to appear ahistorical , technical , and objective . Because chorographers endeavor to " make the land speak " in- stead of simply ...
Seite 33
... never offers further justification for the project itself . He just assumes that such a de- scription of London is ... never finished and was only published long after his death , Leland himself never explicitly chose this title ...
... never offers further justification for the project itself . He just assumes that such a de- scription of London is ... never finished and was only published long after his death , Leland himself never explicitly chose this title ...
Seite 35
... never gets beyond the sense that this is more a record of one individual's travels than a unified compilation of England's to- pography , history , and local monuments . Even when Leland does report the antiquities that he sees or re ...
... never gets beyond the sense that this is more a record of one individual's travels than a unified compilation of England's to- pography , history , and local monuments . Even when Leland does report the antiquities that he sees or re ...
Seite 49
... never reluctant to charge — are often guilty of poor judgment in emblem- atic design.8 Struck by the oddness of an emblem poet openly censuring the inventors of the images in his own book , a number of scholars have tried to account for ...
... never reluctant to charge — are often guilty of poor judgment in emblem- atic design.8 Struck by the oddness of an emblem poet openly censuring the inventors of the images in his own book , a number of scholars have tried to account for ...
Inhalt
29 | |
47 | |
Chaucer Shakespeare Fletcher | 72 |
Ovid and the Question of Politics in Early Modern England | 92 |
Aretino Reads Raimondi | 125 |
George Herbert and the Sacrament of Holy Communion | 136 |
Some Images of Thomas Wentworth First Earl of Stratfford | 153 |
Domestic Politics in The Tragedy of Mariam | 183 |
Gender and the Market in Henry VI I | 206 |
Kinship Succession and Weaponry in Beowulf | 228 |
Shakespeares Bad Jew | 245 |
Trauma Identity and the Failure of the English Reformation | 255 |
Contributors | 274 |
Index | 277 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Arcite Aretino argues Augustus authority Bacon's Beowulf body Cambridge century Charles Chaucer chorographic Clerk's Tale commentary Communion cultural death describes divine duke Earl of Strafford early modern edition Edward emblem book emblematic England English Reformation engravings essay Eucharist evangelicals flesh Fletcher George Herbert gift God's gods Healfdenes heirloom Henry Herod Hrethel's Hrothgar human Hygelac Ibid images interpretation itinerary Joan Joan's John king Knight's Tale Lambarde Leland literary London Lord maps medieval Metamorphoses moral narrative Noble Kinsmen Ovid Ovid's Oxford Palamon perambulation play poem poet poetic poetry political Protestant readers reading reference relationship Renaissance rhetoric Sabinus sacrament Salome Sandys Scott Lucas sense seventeenth-century sexual Shakespeare Shylock sixteenth slander social Somerset's sonnets speaker speech Stow Survey sword symbolic tale Thomas tion tongue traditional Tragedy of Mariam trauma treason University Press Vermigli verse Wiglaf Wither woman women word writes
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 219 - Glory is like a circle in the water, Which never ceaseth to enlarge itself, Till, by broad spreading, it disperse to nought.
Seite 197 - After some time, to abuse Othello's ear, That he is too familiar with his wife. — He hath a person ; and a smooth dispose To be suspected; framed to make women false. The Moor is of a free and open nature, That thinks men honest, that but seem to be so; And will as tenderly be led by the nose, As asses are.
Seite 78 - twixt Po and silver Trent: Chaucer, of all admir'd, the story gives ; There constant to eternity it lives. If we let fall the nobleness of this, And the first sound this child hear be a hiss, How will it shake the bones of that good man, And make him cry from under ground, O, fan From me the witless chaff of such a writer, That blasts my bays, and my famd works makes lighter Than Robin Hood...
Seite 167 - Of all his passions, his pride was most predominant: which a moderate exercise of ill fortune might have corrected and reformed ; and which was by the hand of Heaven strangely punished, by bringing his destruction upon him by two things that he most despised, the people and sir Harry Vane. In a word, the epitaph, which Plutarch records that Sylla wrote for himself, may not be unfitly applied to him ; " that no man did ever pass him, either in doing good to his friends, or in doing mischief to his...
Seite 17 - To speak therefore of medicine, and to resume that we have said, ascending a little higher ; the ancient opinion that man was microcosmus, an abstract or model of the world, hath been fantastically strained by Paracelsus and the alchemists, as if there were to be found in man's body certain correspondences and parallels, which should have respect to all varieties of things, as stars, planets, minerals, which are extant in the great world.
Seite 104 - That as to dispute what God may do is blasphemy, ... so is it sedition in subjects to dispute what a king may do in the height of his power.