Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies > 16th to 18th centuries
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Between Nations - Shakespeare, Spenser, Marvell, and the Question of Britain (Paperback, New Ed)
Loot Price: R653
Discovery Miles 6 530
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Between Nations - Shakespeare, Spenser, Marvell, and the Question of Britain (Paperback, New Ed)
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Total price: R663
Discovery Miles: 6 630
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Fusing historiography with literary criticism, "Between Nations"
produces an array of unexpected readings of early modern texts.
Starting from the premise that England has never been able to
emerge or define itself in isolation from its neighbors on the
British Isles, this book places Renaissance England and its
literature at a meeting of English, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh
histories.
It ranges from the late sixteenth through the late seventeenth
centuries and deals with the "reigns" of three monarchs and one
regicide--those of Elizabeth I, James I, Charles II, and Oliver
Cromwell. However, it shifts the domain they ruled from the
customary center into interactions between England and the other
British polities. The author argues that England was able to
develop into what we call a "nation" only in and by means of its
relations with the other proto-"nations" that often it was also
suppressing.
Among the authors who served one or more of the four English rulers
are Shakespeare, Spenser, and Marvell, who are studied here in the
way they responded to the complexities of British history that
encompassed their "nation." They not only participated in nation
building/destroying, but their works are shown often to be
meditations on that process and their own roles in the process.
In "Henry V," for example, Shakespeare both produces a vision of an
ideal Britain and inscribes into his play the voices of various
British peoples that are meant to be subsumed. Spenser's "A View of
the Present State of Ireland," which is often taken as an
anti-Gaelic screed, is more plausibly seen as a text compounded of
heterogeneous cultural influences, many of them originating from
within Ireland. The complexity of the text reflects Spenser's own
situation as a colonial official exiled from one British nation,
England, to another, Ireland. In "An Horation Ode upon Cromwell's
Return from Ireland," Marvell explicitly considers the consequences
of a campaign that historians have called the "War of the Three
Kingdoms." In that, and in a later poem, "The Loyal Scot," Marvell
emerges as a shrewd commentator on the British politics of his day.
Throughout, the book demonstrates that historical readings of this
period's English literary works can be as multivalent and
multicentric as the British history that produced them.
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