<p><strong>"The groundbreaking comparative analysis in the essays of this collection will change the way in which we read both Wroth and Shakespeare."</strong> - <i>Rosalind Smith, English at University of Newcastle, Australia</i></p><p><strong>"The collection will serve as a useful teaching tool for an exploration of Wroth, who is now considered a canonical writer of the early modern period. The essays (with one exception) cover Wroth's sonnet sequence, her play, and her prose romance, focusing on the ways her writing departs from that of Shakespeare, the best known writer of this period...With an afterword by Mary Ellen Lamb, who has done groundbreaking work in the field of early modern women writers, this small volume is a valuable resource...Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above."</strong><em> - M. Cole, University of Pittsburgh at Bradford, CHOICE</em></p><p><strong>"Wroth and Shakespeare </strong><strong>masterfully demonstrates the synergies between Wroth’s writings and Shakespeare’s. In so doing, it lays a valuable foundation for future research in the field, as well as for the development of new pedagogical approaches to these writers. Opening up vital questions about formal and generic structure, textual circulation, intertextuality, and the construction of gender and sexual identity, <i>Wroth and Shakespeare </i>pushes readers to see both Wroth and Shakespeare anew."</strong> -<em> Katherine R. Larson, University of Toronto, Canada</em></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Paul Salzman is a Professor of English literature at La Trobe University, Australia. He has published extensively on early modern women’s writing, including the monograph Reading Early Modern Women’s Writing (2006). He has recently completed an on-line edition of Mary Wroth’s poetry (http://wroth.latrobe.edu.au/) and is now working on an on-line edition of Love’s Victory and a book on literature and politics in the 1620s.
Marion Wynne-Davies holds the Chair of English Literature in the Department of English at the University of Surrey, UK. Her main areas of interest are Early Modern literature and women’s writing. She has published two editions of primary material, Renaissance Drama by Women: Texts and Documents (1995) and Women Poets of the Renaissance (1998), as well as several collections of essays in the same field. She has published four monographs, Women and Arthurian Literature (1996), Sidney to Milton (2002), Women Writers of the English Renaissance: Familial Discourse (2007) and Margaret Atwood (2010); the next book, Memorialising Early Modern Women Writers will be published in 2014.