The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism: Volume 3, The RenaissanceGeorge Alexander Kennedy, Glyn P. Norton, Jessica Osborn, Hugh Barr Nisbet, Maynard Mack Professor of English Claude Rawson, Marshall Brown, Claude Julien Rawson, Alastair J. Minnis, Christa Knellwolf, Ian Richard Johnson, A. Walton Litz, Raman Selden, Louis Menand, Rafey Habib, Lawrence S. Rainey, Christopher Norris, Christa Knellwolf King Cambridge University Press, 1989 - 782 pagina's Annotation This volume is the first to explore as part of an unbroken continuum the critical legacy both of the humanist rediscovery of ancient learning and of its neoclassical reformulation. Focused on what is arguably the most complex phase in the transmission of the Western literary-critical heritage, the book encompasses those issues that helped shape the way European writers thought about literature from the late Middle Ages to the late seventeenth century. These issues touched almost every facet of Western intellectual endeavour, as well as the historical, cultural, social, scientific, and technological contexts in which that activity evolved. From the interpretative reassessment of the major ancient poetic texts, this volume addresses the emergence of the literary critic in Europe by exploring poetics, prose fiction, contexts of criticism, neoclassicism, and national developments. Sixty-one chapters by internationally respected scholars are supported by an introduction, detailed bibliographies for further investigation and a full index. |
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Inhoudsopgave
Introduction I | 1 |
Theories of language | 25 |
Renaissance exegesis | 36 |
Evangelism and Erasmus | 44 |
The assimilation of Aristotles Poetics in sixteenthcentury | 53 |
commentators into critics | 66 |
Cicero and Quintilian | 77 |
POETICS | 86 |
TudorStuart London | 339 |
Lyons and Paris | 348 |
Culture imperialism and humanist criticism in the Italian | 355 |
Germanspeaking centres and institutions | 364 |
Courts and patronage | 371 |
literary salons in seventeenthcentury | 378 |
Renaissance printing and the book trade | 384 |
The Ciceronian controversy | 395 |
Latin writers | 98 |
writers | 107 |
Petrarchan poetics | 119 |
from Italy | 127 |
Invention | 136 |
in Rhetorical poetics | 145 |
Second rhetoric and the grands rhetoriqueurs | 155 |
art literature and illusion | 161 |
ut pictura poesis | 168 |
Conceptions of style | 176 |
Sir Philip Sidneys An apology for poetry | 187 |
the conception | 199 |
Literary forms | 205 |
The lyric | 216 |
Renaissance theatre and the theory of tragedy | 229 |
Elizabethan theatrical genres and literary theory | 248 |
moral sense | 259 |
Dialogue and discussion in the Renaissance 165 | 265 |
The essay as criticism 2 71 | 271 |
The genres of epigram and emblem 178 | 278 |
Humour and satire in the Renaissance | 284 |
THEORIES OF PROSE FICTION | 295 |
Theories of prose fiction in sixteenthcentury France | 305 |
romanzo 151596 | 322 |
Vives and Ramus | 402 |
The rise of the vernaculars | 409 |
France | 417 |
Women as auctores in early modern Europe | 426 |
Renaissance Neoplatonism | 435 |
Cosmography and poetics | 442 |
Natural philosophy and the new science | 449 |
philosophical revival | 458 |
Calvinism and postTridentine developments | 466 |
PortRoyal and Jansenism | 475 |
Jonson Milton and classical literary | 487 |
The rhetorical ideal in France | 500 |
Cartesian aesthetics | 511 |
probability decorum taste | 522 |
Longinus and the Sublime | 529 |
classical | 543 |
French criticism in the seventeenth century | 555 |
Literarycritical developments in sixteenth | 566 |
The Germanspeaking countries | 591 |
The Low Countries | 600 |
607 | |
669 | |
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