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Trials of Authorship - Anterior Forms and Poetic Reconstruction from Wyatt to Shakespeare (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,235
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Trials of Authorship - Anterior Forms and Poetic Reconstruction from Wyatt to Shakespeare (Paperback)
Series: The New Historicism: Studies in Cultural Poetics, 9
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The English Renaissance has been the focus of intense interpretive
activity. It has been a scene of trial for the critical
methodologies of deconstruction, feminism, new historicism,
psychoanalytic poststructuralism, and cultural studies. Trials of
Authorship extends and challenges this theoretically informed
criticism. Jonathan Crewe argues that the commitment to innovation,
transgression, and radical change has increasingly obscured some
powerfully resistant elements both in Renaissance culture and in
these critical discourses themselves. He calls for a recognition of
defensive, perverse, and self-limiting trends in Renaissance
writing, and also of the conservative investment by critics in the
Renaissance as a cultural epoch. Crewe focuses on the relatively
stable poetic and cultural forms operative in the Renaissance. He
argues that these established forms, which shape poetic
composition, social interaction, and individual identity, are
subject to only limited reconstruction by English authors in the
sixteenth century. They facilitate and limit literary and social
expression and result in more sharply conflicted literary
production than current critics have been willing to acknowledge.
Moreover, Crewe argues that while this literary production is
dominantly masculinist, it nevertheless reveals the stresses of
negotiating complex structures of class and gender, history and
culture. The literary results are accordingly varied and do not
lend themselves to uniform interpretation. Trials of Authorship
presents a consecutive reading of English Renaissance authors from
Wyatt to Shakespeare and redraws the existing picture of the
English Renaissance in the sixteenth century. It does so by
concentrating on authors whose canonical status is somewhat
precarious, namely the poets Wyatt, Surrey, and Gascoigne, and the
"non-literary" authors of two Tudor prose biographies. The book
makes a case for the continuing significance of all the texts in
question, while its emphasis on them also constitutes an
intentional shift away from the Elizabethan period towards that of
Henry VIII. This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived
program, which commemorates University of California Press's
mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them
voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893,
Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship
accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title
was originally published in 1990.
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