Edmund Tilney dedicated to Queen Elizabeth in I568 a time when
she was under considerable pressure to marry a spirited dialogue
concerning appropriate behavior in marriage. In Tilney's conduct
book, which was modeled on Erasmus's Conjugium and Castiglione's
Courtier, fictional counterparts to such notables as Vives,
Erasmus, Heloise, and the queen herself all make an appearance to
offer advice on how to nurture the flower of friendship within
marriage. Extraordinarily popular for a generation following its
first publication, it is available here for the first time in a
critical edition that includes a comprehensive essay by Valerie
Wayne.
In her introduction, Wayne examines the dialogue's competing
notions of conjugality within their historical and literary
contexts and illustrates the impact of humanism on Protestant and
Puritan positions. Since marriage was the most common means by
which Renaissance women in Protestant countries could sustain
themselves outside their parental home, ideologies of marriage
became a primary means by which women were constructed as subjects.
Wayne explores the range of ideologies presented in The Flower if
Friendship, illuminating the contradictory claims of the humanist
position in relation to the conflicts within Elizabethan culture
over the queen's resistance to marriage.
This edition of a lively debate on marital and sexual conduct in
the Renaissance will be welcomed by students and scholars of
Renaissance literature, culture, and history, and by others
interested in gender issues and the history of marriage."
General
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