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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... developed around his circle. The arrival of the Stuart court, with radically different cultural aspirations and a diverse and polycentric organization, would open new opportunities. Fewof the writers who shaped the literary culture ...
... developed around his circle. The arrival of the Stuart court, with radically different cultural aspirations and a diverse and polycentric organization, would open new opportunities. Fewof the writers who shaped the literary culture ...
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... develop under Elizabeth. Unsurprisingly, Foxe retained his influence longest on suffering and defiant Puritan writerslikeJohn Lilburne andJohnBunyan, for whom the experiences of theearly Protestant martyrs provided paradigmsfor their ...
... develop under Elizabeth. Unsurprisingly, Foxe retained his influence longest on suffering and defiant Puritan writerslikeJohn Lilburne andJohnBunyan, for whom the experiences of theearly Protestant martyrs provided paradigmsfor their ...
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... developed toincorporate participants inthebook trade, and includedprinters aswellas bookbinders and those engagedin both retailand wholesale bookselling. Thecraftof the lymner was displaced by print illustration as the tradein ...
... developed toincorporate participants inthebook trade, and includedprinters aswellas bookbinders and those engagedin both retailand wholesale bookselling. Thecraftof the lymner was displaced by print illustration as the tradein ...
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... , was decidedly negative. Anticourt sentiment, couched inmoral and religiousterms, emerged asadominant perspectiveamong those excludedfrom thecourtitself. Other royal courts gradually developed alongside that of the king,
... , was decidedly negative. Anticourt sentiment, couched inmoral and religiousterms, emerged asadominant perspectiveamong those excludedfrom thecourtitself. Other royal courts gradually developed alongside that of the king,
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Thomas N. Corns. Other royal courts gradually developed alongside that of the king, each with its own potential for patronage of the arts. The queen, Anne of Denmark, rapidly assembled a household which retained her closest companions ...
Thomas N. Corns. Other royal courts gradually developed alongside that of the king, each with its own potential for patronage of the arts. The queen, Anne of Denmark, rapidly assembled a household which retained her closest companions ...
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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