Spenser's Legal Language

Spenser's Legal Language
Author: Andrew Zurcher
Publisher: DS Brewer
Total Pages: 332
Release: 2007
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9781843841333

This volume explores Spenser's linguistic experimentation and his engagement with political, and particularly legal, thought and language in his major works, demonstrating by thorough lexical analysis and illustrative readings how Spenser figured the nation both descriptively and prescriptively.

Legal Reform in English Renaissance Literature

Legal Reform in English Renaissance Literature
Author: Virginia Lee Strain
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2018-03-14
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1474416306

The first study of legal reform and literature in early modern EnglandThis book investigates rhetorical and representational practices that were used to monitor English law at the turn of the seventeenth century. The late-Elizabethan and early-Jacobean surge in the policies and enforcement of the reformation of manners has been well-documented. What has gone unnoticed, however, is the degree to which the law itself was the focus of reform for legislators, the judiciary, preachers, and writers alike. While the majority of law and literature studies characterize the law as a force of coercion and subjugation, this book instead treats in greater depth the law's own vulnerability, both to corruption and to correction. In readings of Spenser's Faerie Queene, the Gesta Grayorum, Donne's 'Satyre V', and Shakespeare's Measure for Measure and The Winter's Tale, Strain argues that the terms and techniques of legal reform provided modes of analysis through which legal authorities and literary writers alike imagined and evaluated form and character. Key FeaturesReevaluates canonical writers in light of developments in legal historical research, bringing an interdisciplinary perspective to works Collects an extensive variety of legal, political, and literary sources to reconstruct the discourse on early modern legal reform, providing an introduction to a topic that is currently underrepresented in early modern legal cultural studiesAnalyses the laws own vulnerability to individual agency.

Rereading Chaucer and Spenser

Rereading Chaucer and Spenser
Author: Rachel Stenner
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 371
Release: 2019-05-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1526136937

Rereading Chaucer and Spenser: Dan Geffrey with the New Poete offers dynamic new approaches to the relationship between the works of Geoffrey Chaucer and Edmund Spenser. Contributors draw on current and emerging preoccupations in contemporary scholarship and offer new perspectives on poetic authority, influence, and intertextuality.

Spenser's Irish Work

Spenser's Irish Work
Author: Thomas Herron
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 427
Release: 2016-12-05
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1351898663

Exploring Edmund Spenser's writings within the historical and aesthetic context of colonial agricultural reform in Ireland, his adopted home, this study demonstrates how Irish events and influences operate in far more of Spenser's work than previously suspected. Thomas Herron explores Spenser's relation to contemporary English poets and polemicists in Munster, such as Sir Walter Raleigh, Ralph Birkenshaw and Parr Lane, as well as heretofore neglected Irish material in Elizabethan pageantry in the 1590s, such as the famously elaborate state performances at Elvetham and Rycote. New light is shed here on the Irish significance of both the earlier and later Books of The Fairie Queene. Herron examines in depth Spenser's adaptation of the paradigm of the laboring artist for empire found in Virgil's Georgics, which Herron weaves explicitly with Spenser's experience as an administrator, property owner and planter in Ireland. Taking in history, religion, geography, classics and colonial studies, as well as early modern literature and Irish studies, this book constitutes a valuable addition to Spenser scholarship.

The art of The Faerie Queene

The art of The Faerie Queene
Author: Richard Danson Brown
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2021-01-19
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1526134632

The Art of The Faerie Queene is the first book centrally focused on the forms and poetic techniques employed by Spenser. It offers a sharp new perspective on Spenser by rereading The Faerie Queene as poetry which is at once absorbing, demanding and experimental. Instead of the traditional conservative model of Spenser as poet, this book presents the poem as radical, edgy and unconventional, thus proposing new ways of understanding the Elizabethan poetic Renaissance. The book moves from the individual words of the poem to metre, rhyme and stanza form onto its larger structures of canto and book. It will be of particular relevance to undergraduates studying Elizabethan poetry, graduate students and scholars of Renaissance poetry, for whom the formal aspect of the poetry has been a topic of growing relevance in recent years.

A Critical Companion to Spenser Studies

A Critical Companion to Spenser Studies
Author: Bart Van Es
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 326
Release: 2005-11-30
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0230524567

This book provides an authoritative guide to debate on Elizabethan England's poet laureate. It covers key topics and provides histories for all of the primary texts. Some of today's most prominent Spenser scholars offer accounts of debates on the poet, from the Renaissance to the present day. Essential for those producing new research on Spenser.

Spenser's Narrative Figuration of Women in The Faerie Queene

Spenser's Narrative Figuration of Women in The Faerie Queene
Author: Judith H Anderson
Publisher: Medieval Institute Publications
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2018-03-31
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1580443184

Concentrating on major figures of women in The Faerie Queene, together with the figures constellated around them, Anderson's Narrative Figuration explores the contribution of Spenser's epic romance to an appreciation of women's plights and possibilities in the age of Elizabeth. Taken together, their stories have a meaningful tale to tell about the function of narrative, which proves central to figuration in the still moving, metamorphic poem that Spenser created.

Spenser's International Style

Spenser's International Style
Author: David Scott Wilson-Okamura
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 251
Release: 2013-06-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1107245222

Why did Spenser write his epic, The Faerie Queene, in stanzas instead of a classical meter or blank verse? Why did he affect the vocabulary of medieval poets such as Chaucer? Is there, as centuries of readers have noticed, something lyrical about Spenser's epic style, and if so, why? In this accessible and wide-ranging study, David Scott Wilson-Okamura reframes these questions in a larger, European context. The first full-length treatment of Spenser's poetic style in more than four decades, it shows that Spenser was English without being insular. In his experiments with style, Spenser faced many of the same problems, and found some of the same solutions, as poets writing in other languages. Drawing on classical rhetoric and using concepts that were developed by literary critics during the Renaissance, this is an account of long-term, international trends in style, illustrated with examples from Petrarch, Du Bellay, Ariosto and Tasso.

Edmund Spenser

Edmund Spenser
Author: Andrew Hadfield
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 647
Release: 2014
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0198703007

"The first biography in sixty years of the most important non-dramatic poet of the English Renaissance"--From publisher description.