Reading Monarch's Writing: The Poetry of Henry VIII, Mary Stuart, Elizabeth I, and James VI/IPeter C. Herman Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2002 - 330 páginas "In the first book to examine the verse produced by Tudor and Stuart monarchs, eight Renaissance scholars demonstrate how monarchs used verse to reflect on their monarchic status and to assert royal policy. As almost all of the poetry of these regal authors is inaccessible, the volume includes a selection of their verse in modernized and newly edited texts, offering an ideal study volume for specialists and the classroom. The contributors examine the nexus of poetry and power from an unconventional New Historicist perspective: from that of the person in power who writes poetry rather than that of the suitor of power. Their approaches to the subject are interdisciplinary, combining literary studies, women's studies, history, the history of sexuality, and manuscript studies." -- |
Dentro del libro
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Página 5
... less certain , as her sonnets were not only published without her permission , but as part of Buchanan's book arguing for Mary's responsibility for her husband's murder . Yet Mary never disclaimed responsibility for the Casket Sonnets ...
... less certain , as her sonnets were not only published without her permission , but as part of Buchanan's book arguing for Mary's responsibility for her husband's murder . Yet Mary never disclaimed responsibility for the Casket Sonnets ...
Página 28
... less willingly and less successfully under any commander other than their king , " the obvious course was for him to lead the troops personally . " Significantly , Henry had to browbeat his nobles into agreeing with him : Wherefore he ...
... less willingly and less successfully under any commander other than their king , " the obvious course was for him to lead the troops personally . " Significantly , Henry had to browbeat his nobles into agreeing with him : Wherefore he ...
Página 292
... less , as I cannot without shameful repetition speak any more thereof . And in a word : whatsoever praise I have given to Don Joan in this poem , it is neither in accompting him as first or second cause of that victory , but only as of ...
... less , as I cannot without shameful repetition speak any more thereof . And in a word : whatsoever praise I have given to Don Joan in this poem , it is neither in accompting him as first or second cause of that victory , but only as of ...
Contenido
and the Poetry of Politics | 11 |
The Verse of Mary Queen of Scots | 35 |
Doubt Justice and Constancy | 109 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 12 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Arte of English authority battle Battle of Lepanto beth bien Bothwell Cambridge Casket Letters Castalian Band Catholic Christian circulation coeur constancy court courtier courtly Craigie Culture desire doth Doubt of Future early modern Eliza England English Poesie epic essay feminine fiction figure Fortune French Future Foes George Puttenham grace Harington hath heart Henry VIII Henry's honor J'ai James VI/I James's justice Kevin Sharpe King James king's Lady language Lepanto Letters Lisa Hopkins London Lord Louise Labé lover manuscript Mary Queen Mary's masculine means monarch Nonny Oxford Pastime peace Petrarchan poem poem's poet poetic poetry political praise prince Protestant Puttenham Queen Elizabeth Queen of Scots queen regnant readers reign Renaissance Ronsard royal satires Scotland Scottish Scottish Literature seul song sonnets speech thou tion toppes translation Tudor Turks University Press verse veux victory women writing written wrote youth rules