Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Plays & playwrights > 16th to 18th centuries > Shakespeare studies & criticism
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Ruin and Reformation in Spenser, Shakespeare, and Marvell (Hardcover)
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Ruin and Reformation in Spenser, Shakespeare, and Marvell (Hardcover)
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Ruin and Reformation in Spenser, Shakespeare, and Marvell explores
writerly responses to the religious violence of the long
reformation in England and Wales, spanning over a century of
literature and history, from the establishment of the national
church under Henry VIII (1534), to its disestablishment under
Oliver Cromwell (1653). It focuses on representations of ruined
churches, monasteries, and cathedrals in the works of a range of
English Protestant writers, including Spenser, Shakespeare, Jonson,
Herbert, Denham, and Marvell, reading literature alongside episodes
in English reformation history: from the dissolution of the
monasteries and the destruction of church icons and images, to the
puritan reforms of the 1640s. The study departs from previous
responses to literature's 'bare ruined choirs', which tend to read
writerly ambivalence towards the dissolution of the monasteries as
evidence of traditionalist, catholic, or Laudian nostalgia for the
pre-reformation church. Instead, Ruin and Reformation shows how
English protestants of all varieties-from Laudians to
Presbyterians-could, and did, feel ambivalence towards, and anxiety
about, the violence that accompanied the dissolution of the
monasteries and other acts of protestant reform. The study
therefore demonstrates that writerly misgivings about ruin and
reformation need not necessarily signal an author's opposition to
England's reformation project. In so doing, Ruin and Reformation
makes an important contribution to cross-disciplinary debates about
the character of English Protestantism in its formative century,
revealing that doubts about religious destruction were as much a
part of the experience of English protestantism as expressions of
popular support for iconoclasm in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries.
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