Traditions and Innovations: Essays on British Literature of the Middle Ages and the RenaissanceDavid G. Allen, Robert A. White University of Delaware Press, 1990 - 271 páginas This collection considers a wide range of texts, authors, and concerns--from the Man of Law's Tale to Tis Pity She's a Whore; from the mysterious Thomas Malory to the widely visible Ben Jonson; from the image of St. Paul's thorn in Troilus and Criseyde to the Renaissance iconography of Ganymede. |
Contenido
7 | |
Separations and St Pauls Thorn in Chaucers Troilus | 35 |
of Chaucers Canterbury Tales and the Mental | 50 |
Tracing the Provenance | 75 |
Spensers Arachnean | 88 |
Patriarchal Fatherhood in Ben Jonsons Epigram 45 | 102 |
Traditions and Subtext | 126 |
Thomas Heywoods A Woman Killed with Kindness as Domestic | 150 |
Type and Antitype | 177 |
The Temptation of | 187 |
Poetry as Sacred | 214 |
Resonance in the Poetry of Robert Herrick | 223 |
Iconographic Traditions and Peachams | 231 |
King George of England Meets Samuel Johnson the Great Cham | 251 |
Notes on Contributors | 265 |
The Tragedy of Annabella in Tis Pity Shes a Whore | 163 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Traditions and Innovations: Essays on British Literature of the Middle Ages ... David G. Allen,Robert A. White Vista de fragmentos - 1990 |
Términos y frases comunes
Adam Alliterative Morte Arthure Annabella Anne Anne's Arachne Arachne's Arcite audience Aumerle authority beauty Ben Jonson Boethian Bolingbroke Canterbury Tales Caxton century Chaucer Christ Christian classical context courtly Criseyde critical death divine drama Duchess eagle earthly Elizabethan emblem English Eve's example father flesh flyting Frankford Ganymede Giovanni God's hath heaven heavenly Herbert heroic Herrick human husband ideal Jacobean John John Ford Jonson Kempter king Knight's Tale knowledge language Law's Tale Le Morte Darthur lines literary literature London lovers lyric manuscript medieval Milton Minerva moral myth Narcissus narrative narrator narrator's nature Palamon patronage Paul Paul's Peacham philosophical play poem poet poetic poetry praise Princeton printed reason Renaissance repentance Richard scene Shakespeare Shipman's Tale social speech Spenser Studies suggest thee Theseus Thomas Malory thorn thou tion Tis Pity tradition tragedy Troilus Troilus and Criseyde University Press Wendoll Wendoll's wisdom woman writing York Zeus