Syr P S His Astrophel And Stella
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Handbook to the Popular, Poetical and Dramatic Literature of Great Britain
Author | : William Carew Hazlitt |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 732 |
Release | : 1867 |
Genre | : English literature |
ISBN | : |
The complete poems of Sir Philip Sidney
Author | : Alexander Balloch Grosart |
Publisher | : BoD – Books on Demand |
Total Pages | : 286 |
Release | : 2024-08-01 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 338554548X |
Reprint of the original, first published in 1877.
Making the Miscellany
Author | : Megan Heffernan |
Publisher | : University of Pennsylvania Press |
Total Pages | : 304 |
Release | : 2021-03-05 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 0812252802 |
In Making the Miscellany Megan Heffernan examines the poetic design of early modern printed books and explores how volumes of compiled poems, which have always existed in practice, responded to media change in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England. Heffernan's focus is not only the material organization of printed poetry, but also how those conventions and innovations of arrangement contributed to vernacular poetic craft, the consolidation of ideals of individual authorship, and centuries of literary history. The arrangement of printed compilations contains a largely unstudied and undertheorized archive of poetic form, Heffernan argues. In an evolving system of textual transmission, compilers were experimenting with how to contain individual poems within larger volumes. By paying attention to how they navigated and shaped the exchanges between poems and their organization, she reveals how we can witness the basic power of imaginative writing over the material text. Making the Miscellany is also a study of how this history of textual design has been differently told by the distinct disciplines of bibliography or book history and literary studies, each of which has handled—and obscured—the formal qualities of early modern poetry compilations and the practices that produced them. Revisiting these editorial and critical approaches, this book recovers a moment when compilers, poets, and readers were alert to a poetics of organization that exceeded the limits of the individual poem.
Shakespeare's Humanism
Author | : Robin Headlam Wells |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 290 |
Release | : 2005-12-08 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1139447475 |
Renaissance humanists believed that if you want to build a just society you must begin with the facts of human nature. This book argues that the idea of a universal human nature was as important to Shakespeare as it was to every other Renaissance writer. In doing so it questions the central principle of post-modern Shakespeare criticism. Postmodernists insist that the notion of defining a human essence was alien to Shakespeare and his contemporaries; as radical anti-essentialists, the Elizabethans were, in effect, postmodernists before their time. In challenging this claim Shakespeare's Humanism shows that for Shakespeare, as for every other humanist writer in this period, the key to all wise action was 'the knowledge of our selves and our human condition'.