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Poetry and the Cromwellian Protectorate - Culture, Politics, and Institutions (Hardcover)
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Poetry and the Cromwellian Protectorate - Culture, Politics, and Institutions (Hardcover)
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The Cromwellian Protectorate was a period of innovation in poetry
and drama, as well as constitutional debate. This new account of
the period focuses on key cultural institutions -- Parliament, an
embassy to Sweden, Oxford University, Cromwell's state funeral --
to examine this poetry's relationship with a culture in
transformation and crisis.
Edward Holberton shows that the Protectorate's instabilities
helped to generate lively and innovative poetry. Protectorate verse
explores the faultlines of a culture which ceaselessly contested
the authority of its own institutions, including the office of
Protector itself. Poetry by Andrew Marvell, Edmund Waller, William
Davenant, and John Dryden, contributed to a vibrant poetic culture
which embraced diverse forms and occasions: masques for the
weddings of Cromwell's daughters, diplomatic poems to Queen
Christina of Sweden, naval victories, civic pageants, and
university anthologies in celebration of a peace treaty. Many of
these texts prove difficult to align with established ideas of the
political and cultural contests of the age, because they become
entangled with cultural institutions which could no longer be taken
for granted, and were in many cases transforming rapidly, with
far-reaching historical consequences.
Poetry and the Cromwellian Protectorate asks how poetry confronted
questions that were complicated by institutional practices, how
poets tried to square their wider cultural sympathies with their
interests in a particular parliamentary or university crisis, and
how changes in institutions afforded poets critical insights into
their society's problems and its place in the world. The readings
in this book challenge previousrepresentations of Protectorate
culture as a phase of conservative backsliding, or pragmatic
compromise, under a quasi-monarchical order. Protectorate verse
emerges as nuanced and vital writing, which looks beyond the
personality of Oliver Cromwell to the tensions that shaped his
power. Poetry and the Cromwellian Protectorate argues that it is
precisely through being contingent and compromised that these poems
achieve their vitality, and become so revealing.
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