Pseudonymous Shakespeare: Rioting Language in the Sidney CircleRoutledge, 2016 M12 5 - 288 páginas An investigation into modes of early modern English literary 'indirection,' this study could also be considered a detective work on a pseudonym attached to some late sixteenth-century works. In the course of unmasking 'R.L.', McCarthy scrutinizes devices employed by writers in the Sidney coterie: punning, often across languages; repetitio-insistence on a sound, or hiding two persons 'under one hood'; disingenuous juxtaposition; evocation of original context; differential spelling (intended and significant). Among McCarthy's stunning-but solidly underpinned-conclusions are: Shakespeare used the pseudonym 'R.L.' among other pseudonyms; one, 'William Smith', was also his 'alias' in life; Shakespeare was at the heart of the Sidney circle, whose literary programme was hostile to Elizabeth I; and his work, composed mainly from the late 1570s to the early 90s, occasionally 'embedded' in the work of others, was covertly alluded to more often than has been recognized. |
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... young. The contents of the library of 'Captain Cox', a local man, have informed his mind - as they informed the mind of another local boy also very young in 1575, William Shakespeare. Shakespeare's plays abound with allusions to tales ...
... young. The contents of the library of 'Captain Cox', a local man, have informed his mind - as they informed the mind of another local boy also very young in 1575, William Shakespeare. Shakespeare's plays abound with allusions to tales ...
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... young. He 'enjoyed' an uneasy social status, was not quite a Cambridge undergraduate, and perhaps not quite a law student (or perhaps he was one). He taught in the country, enjoyed serially Sir Edward Denny's, Sir John Salusbury's and ...
... young. He 'enjoyed' an uneasy social status, was not quite a Cambridge undergraduate, and perhaps not quite a law student (or perhaps he was one). He taught in the country, enjoyed serially Sir Edward Denny's, Sir John Salusbury's and ...
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... young Englishman, Dunraven, to his friend Unwin, in Cornwall in 1914. But Borges is of course doing more with his double tale than appears on the surface. He is leading us to understand something about all tales, their tellers and their ...
... young Englishman, Dunraven, to his friend Unwin, in Cornwall in 1914. But Borges is of course doing more with his double tale than appears on the surface. He is leading us to understand something about all tales, their tellers and their ...
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... young page. In his case, there is a plausible reason for his self-description as 'the Black Prince'. In the course of the chapter, I hope to reveal a depth of opposition on the part of the Leicester faction to the Queen that has been ...
... young page. In his case, there is a plausible reason for his self-description as 'the Black Prince'. In the course of the chapter, I hope to reveal a depth of opposition on the part of the Leicester faction to the Queen that has been ...
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... young Warwickshire servant taken into the household of the earl at Kenilworth, and spoiled by all because of his talents. How young was he? How small? In fairy lore the Black Prince was the diminutive Fairy Prince, consort to the Fairy ...
... young Warwickshire servant taken into the household of the earl at Kenilworth, and spoiled by all because of his talents. How young was he? How small? In fairy lore the Black Prince was the diminutive Fairy Prince, consort to the Fairy ...
Contenido
Supposes | |
Second Candidate Dom Diego | |
More Supposes | |
Third Candidate Friend of Richard Barnfield | |
Further Supposes | |
Fourth Candidate Dick of Lichfield | |
Last Supposes | |
R L s Biography | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Pseudonymous Shakespeare: Rioting Language in the Sidney Circle Penny McCarthy Vista previa limitada - 2006 |
Pseudonymous Shakespeare: Rioting Language in the Sidney Circle Penny McCarthy Vista de fragmentos - 2006 |
Pseudonymous Shakespeare: Rioting Language in the Sidney Circle Penny McCarthy Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
Abenjacán allusion Arden Astrophel authorship Barnfield's Burbage Cambridge University Press chapter character Chloris Clarendon Press contemporary coterie critics Cuddie Cymbeline dedication Diego Diella Dudley Earl eclogue Edited Edward elegy Elizabethan English Epistle fact father Gabriel Harvey Ganimede Gascoigne Gascoigne's George Gascoigne gloss Greene Greene's Grosart Harvey's Henry identity Italian John joke Jonson Kenilworth King Klawitter Lady Langham Latin Leicester Leicester's Lenten Stuffe Letter Library lines literary London Macbeth manuscript Marlowe Mary Sidney Mercury Nashe's Nicholas Breton Orlando Furioso Oxford Paper Book patron patronage Patten Philip Sidney poem poet poetic poetry printed pseudonym published Queen Rapsodie reader reference Richard Richard Lichfield Robert Robert Greene Shepheardes Calender Sidneian Sidney circle Sidney's song sonnet Spenser Stella story Stratford suggest supposed Thomas Nashe thou Titus Andronicus translation verse vols Walthamstow William Shakespeare William Smith Winter's Tale words writing young