Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies > 16th to 18th centuries
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Patrons and Patron Saints in Early Modern English Literature (Hardcover, New)
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Patrons and Patron Saints in Early Modern English Literature (Hardcover, New)
Series: Routledge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book visits the fact that, in the pre-modern world, saints and
lords served structurally similar roles, acting as patrons to those
beneath them on the spiritual or social ladder with the word
"patron" used to designate both types of elite sponsor. Chapman
argues that this elision of patron saints and patron lords remained
a distinctive feature of the early modern English imagination and
that it is central to some of the key works of literature in the
period. Writers like Jonson, Shakespeare, Spenser, Drayton, Donne
and, Milton all use medieval patron saints in order to represent
and to challenge early modern ideas of patronage -- not just
patronage in the narrow sense of the immediate economic relations
obtaining between client and sponsor, but also patronage as a
society-wide system of obligation and reward that itself
crystallized a whole culture's assumptions about order and degree.
The works studied in this book -- ranging from Shakespeare's 2
Henry VI, written early in the 1590s, to Milton's Masque Performed
at Ludlow Castle, written in 1634 -- are patronage works, either
aimed at a specific patron or showing a keen awareness of the
larger patronage system. This volume challenges the idea that the
early modern world had shrugged off its own medieval past, instead
arguing that Protestant writers in the period were actively using
the medieval Catholic ideal of the saint as a means to represent
contemporary systems of hierarchy and dependence. Saints had been
the ideal -- and idealized -- patrons of the medieval world and
remained so for early modern English recusants. As a result, their
legends and iconographies provided early modern Protestant authors
with the perfect tool for thinking about the urgent and complex
question of who owed allegiance to whom in a rapidly changing
world.
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