Dryden and the Problem of Freedom: The Republican Aftermath, 1649-1680Yale University Press, 1997 M01 1 - 285 páginas In this revisionary study of Dryden's thought, David Haley argues that Dryden was the first English poet after Shakespeare to engage in historical reflection upon his own culture. Addressing an audience for whom literature was bound up with religion and politics, Dryden exercised the moral integrity of a public poet and brought home to his readers the meaning of their historical experience. |
Contenido
Praise and Deliberation under the Republic | 19 |
Cromwell and the Millennium | 46 |
Drydens Hermeneutics | 79 |
False Freedom and Restoration | 107 |
The Last Age | 140 |
The Heroic Plays | 173 |
Satire | 216 |
Notes | 245 |
277 | |
Términos y frases comunes
Absalom and Achitophel action allusion Almanzor Anglican Annus Mirabilis army Astraea Redux audience Aureng-Zebe authority biblical Cavalier chapter Charles church civic Civil common Commonwealth criticism Crom Cromwell Cromwell's crown Davenant Davenant's dissent doctrine dramatic England English epic Essay Fifth Monarchists godly Gondibert Harth hermeneutics hero heroic decorum heroic plays Heroique Stanzas Hirst historical Hobbes Horatian Ode Howard imagination John Dryden king king's Last Age later Leviathan lines Lord Mac Flecknoe Machiavellian Marvell Marvell's McFadden McKeon millenarian Milton mimesis monarchy moral science nation nature Orrery Parliament passions Pocock poem poem's poet's poetry political preface Presbyterian Pride's Purge private judgment problem of freedom Protectorate providential mimesis prudence public poet Puritan Queen radical readers rebellion reflexivity reform Regicide Religio Laici religion religious republican Restoration rhetorical rhyme royalist rule saeculum satire says scene Scripture secular Shaftesbury sovereign sovereignty tion Tory tradition Tyrannick Love University Press usurper virtù Wallace Whig Winn