Buildings tell stories. Castles, country homes, churches, and
monasteries are "documents" of the people who built them, owned
them, lived and died in them, inherited and saved or destroyed
them, and recorded their histories. "Literature and Architecture in
Early Modern England" examines the relationship between sixteenth-
and seventeenth-century architectural and literary works. By
becoming more sensitive to the narrative functions of architecture,
Anne M. Myers argues, we begin to understand how a range of writers
viewed and made use of the material built environment that
surrounded the production of early modern texts in England.
Scholars have long found themselves in the position of excusing
or explaining England's failure to achieve the equivalent of the
Italian Renaissance in the visual arts. Myers proposes that
architecture inspired an unusual amount of historiographic and
literary production, including poetry, drama, architectural
treatises, and diaries. Works by William Camden, Henry Wotton, Ben
Jonson, Andrew Marvell, George Herbert, Anne Clifford, and John
Evelyn, when considered as a group, are texts that overturn the
engrained critical notion that a Protestant fear of idolatry
sentenced the visual arts and architecture in England to a state of
suspicion and neglect.
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