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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... play texts, were transmittedfirstasinkonpaper. Few workingmanuscriptsofsignificance survivefromthisperiod.Perhapsthe most famous–andmostdisputed–isthe play text, Sir Thomas More (British Library, MSHarley7368). The main part of the ...
... play texts, were transmittedfirstasinkonpaper. Few workingmanuscriptsofsignificance survivefromthisperiod.Perhapsthe most famous–andmostdisputed–isthe play text, Sir Thomas More (British Library, MSHarley7368). The main part of the ...
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... Play textsbelonged totheatre companies,which operated ona repertory system, reviving old playsas wellas performing ... play manuscripts hadso obvious aninterest in withholding them from printthatthe emergence of asupplyof printed plays ...
... Play textsbelonged totheatre companies,which operated ona repertory system, reviving old playsas wellas performing ... play manuscripts hadso obvious aninterest in withholding them from printthatthe emergence of asupplyof printed plays ...
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... plays forcompanies of boyactorsand published verse satires that contributed to the tighteningof censorship in1599 (see below).Anthony Mundaywrote forthe press newsbooks, antiCatholic propaganda and translations of French romances, and ...
... plays forcompanies of boyactorsand published verse satires that contributed to the tighteningof censorship in1599 (see below).Anthony Mundaywrote forthe press newsbooks, antiCatholic propaganda and translations of French romances, and ...
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... played regularly in the City. The threeadult companies, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, theLord Admiral's Men and the Earl of ... play till 1602. (This account and what follows restlargely on Wickhamet al. 2000: Pt III,which in turndraws on ...
... played regularly in the City. The threeadult companies, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, theLord Admiral's Men and the Earl of ... play till 1602. (This account and what follows restlargely on Wickhamet al. 2000: Pt III,which in turndraws on ...
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... play has been thesubject ofsomespeculation. However,it seems likeliestthat, in the spiritof contemporary satire, it approached too closely the critical representationofliving persons. TheIsle of Dogs, a muddy spit inthe Thames downriver ...
... play has been thesubject ofsomespeculation. However,it seems likeliestthat, in the spiritof contemporary satire, it approached too closely the critical representationofliving persons. TheIsle of Dogs, a muddy spit inthe Thames downriver ...
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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