These essays contribute fascinating insights to the ongoing reassessment of humanism during Shakespeare's time.

Times Literary Supplement

Offers fresh insights and varied methodologies into a seldom trodden literary area.

Cahiers Elisabéthains

Tracing the development of narrative verse in London's literary circles during the 1590s, this volume puts Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece into conversation with poems by a wide variety of contemporary writers, including Thomas Lodge, Francis Beaumont, Christopher Marlowe, Thomas Heywood, Thomas Campion and Edmund Spenser. Chapters investigate the complexities of this literary conversation and contribute for the current, vigorous reassessment of humanism's intended consequences by drawing attention to the highly diverse forms of early modern classicism as well as the complex connection between Latin pedagogy and vernacular poetic invention.

Key themes and topics include:
-Epyllia, masculinity and sexuality
-Classicism and commerce
-Genre and mimesis
-Rhetoric and aesthetics

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Series Preface
Notes on Contributors

Lynn Enterline, Introduction: On ‘Schoolmen’s Cunning Notes’

Part One. Reckoning with Rhetoric

1. Jenny C. Mann, ‘Reck’ning’ with Shakespeare’s Orpheus in The Rape of Lucrece
2. Rachel Eisendrath, Poetry at the Limits of Rhetoric in Shakespeare’s The Rape of Lucrece

Part Two. Debating Mimesis

3. Joseph M. Ortiz, Epic Oenone, Pastoral Paris: Undoing the Virgilian rota in Thomas Heywood’s Oenone and Paris
4. Andrew Fleck, ‘Arte with her contending, doth aspire T’excell the naturall’: Contending for Representation in the Elizabethan Epyllion
5. Catherine Nicholson, Learning to Read with Lucrece


Part Three. Epyllia, Masculinity and Sexuality

6. Jessica Winston, From Discontent to Disdain: Thomas Lodge’s Scillaes Metamorphosis and Inns of Court
7. John S. Garrison, Love Will Tear Us Apart: Campion’s Umbra and Shakespeare’s Venus and Adonis
8. Stephen Guy-Bray, Love Loves: Venus and Adonis, Venus and Anchises


Part Four. Classicism and Mercantile Capital

9. Jane Raisch, Crossing the Hellespont: The Erotics of the Everyday in Marlowe’s Hero and Leander
10. Barbara Correll, ‘Unthriftie waste’: Epyllia, Idleness, and General Economy

Appendix
Notes
Index

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A collection of essays with new approaches to Tudor epic poems that put Shakespeare’s two narrative poems in conversation with other poets – dramatists as well as lawyers – to uncover the varied modes of social and literary critique enabled by humanist rhetorical training.
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Brings much-needed attention to Shakespeare’s connections with the highly diverse, at times pugnacious, forms of Tudor classicism deployed by his contemporaries – playwrights, poets, and lawyers
Each volume in the series is an expedition to discover the ‘state of play’ with respect to Shakespeare’s major plays. Featuring ten or more newly commissioned essays written by world-class Shakespeareans, each volume presents a detailed engagement with a single play, focusing on current issues in teaching, performance and research.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350073364
Publisert
2019-07-11
Utgiver
Vendor
The Arden Shakespeare
Vekt
399 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

Redaktør
Series edited by

Om bidragsyterne

Lynn Enterline is Nancy Perot Mulford Professor of English at Vanderbilt University. She is author of The Rhetoric of the Body from Ovid to Shakespeare and The Tears of Narcissus: Melancholia and Masculinity in Early Modern Writing.