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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... intoand promotion through a profession which couldbe lucrative and which carriedsome prestige, thoughalso, perhaps, some lingering taint of the social stigma which adhered to anyone in early modern England who had to.
... intoand promotion through a profession which couldbe lucrative and which carriedsome prestige, thoughalso, perhaps, some lingering taint of the social stigma which adhered to anyone in early modern England who had to.
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... perhaps, is why vernacular writing is so rarely referredtoin neoLatin works. Vernacular writing belongs, on the whole, to a different world; and much of the English vernacular writing of the time may have seemed crude, clumsy and ...
... perhaps, is why vernacular writing is so rarely referredtoin neoLatin works. Vernacular writing belongs, on the whole, to a different world; and much of the English vernacular writing of the time may have seemed crude, clumsy and ...
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... perhaps fordebt(for example, see Henslowe 1904–8: I,100). He was immenselypopularin his ownage.Yetthe circumstancesof literary production rendered himvirtuallyinvisible toposterity. Bytrade, curiously, hewas amaster printer (Schoenbaum ...
... perhaps fordebt(for example, see Henslowe 1904–8: I,100). He was immenselypopularin his ownage.Yetthe circumstancesof literary production rendered himvirtuallyinvisible toposterity. Bytrade, curiously, hewas amaster printer (Schoenbaum ...
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... perhaps supporting the conclusion thattheir ownersread themto pieces (Schoenbaum 1975: 131). ButSir Philip Sidney proved a more influential model for poetic conduct. Sidney was a unique figure in Elizabethan literary history.His ...
... perhaps supporting the conclusion thattheir ownersread themto pieces (Schoenbaum 1975: 131). ButSir Philip Sidney proved a more influential model for poetic conduct. Sidney was a unique figure in Elizabethan literary history.His ...
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... perhaps the most renownedscrivener active in thatbusiness fromthe late Elizabethan period. The Stationers'Company developed toincorporate participants inthebook trade, and includedprinters aswellas bookbinders and those engagedin both ...
... perhaps the most renownedscrivener active in thatbusiness fromthe late Elizabethan period. The Stationers'Company developed toincorporate participants inthebook trade, and includedprinters aswellas bookbinders and those engagedin both ...
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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