A History of Seventeenth-Century English LiteratureJohn Wiley & Sons, 16 dec 2013 - 480 pagina's A History of Seventeenth-Century Literature outlines significant developments in the English literary tradition between the years 1603 and 1690.
Thomas Corns is a major international authority on Milton, the Caroline Court, and the political literature of the English Civil War and the Interregnum. |
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... chapter deals with the literaryhistoryof the concluding years of the Tudor era. In terms of the materialcircumstances ofliteraryproduction and consumption, much that is describedremained substantiallyunchanged fromthe 1590s, nor were ...
... chapter deals with the literaryhistoryof the concluding years of the Tudor era. In terms of the materialcircumstances ofliteraryproduction and consumption, much that is describedremained substantiallyunchanged fromthe 1590s, nor were ...
Pagina
... chapter.Each page hasa header. The margins arecrammed with glosses, interpretation, crossreferences, and further pointers tocontext. Its evident concerns with personalsalvation carrythrough to its final motto, appended toitspenultimate ...
... chapter.Each page hasa header. The margins arecrammed with glosses, interpretation, crossreferences, and further pointers tocontext. Its evident concerns with personalsalvation carrythrough to its final motto, appended toitspenultimate ...
Pagina
... chapter 5).Neoclassicism develops acrossthe seventeenth centuryasthe most dynamic andpervasive cultural ideology in English vernacular literature.Itis surely fedbyan admiration forand familiarity with the classical literary tradition ...
... chapter 5).Neoclassicism develops acrossthe seventeenth centuryasthe most dynamic andpervasive cultural ideology in English vernacular literature.Itis surely fedbyan admiration forand familiarity with the classical literary tradition ...
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... chapter 2).Yetit may in part explain themost significant exception tothe predominance of manuscript circulation inlate Elizabethan poetry: the sonnet sequence. Woudhuysen argues that the suddenavailability in print ofSidney's Astrophil ...
... chapter 2).Yetit may in part explain themost significant exception tothe predominance of manuscript circulation inlate Elizabethan poetry: the sonnet sequence. Woudhuysen argues that the suddenavailability in print ofSidney's Astrophil ...
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... chapter 2). Before those reversals, the stage was for the most part in quite good health, if somewhatcowed byrecent events. Five companies played regularly in the City. The threeadult companies, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, theLord ...
... chapter 2). Before those reversals, the stage was for the most part in quite good health, if somewhatcowed byrecent events. Five companies played regularly in the City. The threeadult companies, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, theLord ...
Inhoudsopgave
March 1629 to April | |
The Making of the Caroline Court | |
Poetry andProseRomance NonFictional Prose | |
From Manuscript to Print Plays and Players | |
April 1640 | |
May 1660 | |
From | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |
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