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The Book of Books - Biblical Interpretation, Literary Culture, and the Political Imagination from Erasmus to Milton (Hardcover)
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The Book of Books - Biblical Interpretation, Literary Culture, and the Political Imagination from Erasmus to Milton (Hardcover)
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Just as the Reformation was a movement of intertwined theological
and political aims, many individual authors of the time shifted
back and forth between biblical interpretation and political
writing. Two foundational figures in the history of the Renaissance
Bible, Desiderius Erasmus and William Tyndale, are cases in point,
one writing in Latin, the other in the vernacular. Erasmus
undertook the project of retranslating and annotating the New
Testament at the same time that he developed rhetorical approaches
for addressing princes in his Education of a Christian Prince
(1516); Tyndale was occupied with biblically inflected works such
as his Obedience of a Christian Man (1528) while translating and
annotating the first printed English Bibles. In The Book of Books,
Thomas Fulton charts the process of recovery, interpretation, and
reuse of scripture in early modern England, exploring the uses of
the Bible as a supremely authoritative text that was continually
transformed for political purposes. In a series of case studies
linked to biblical translation, polemical tracts, and works of
imaginative literature produced during the reigns of successive
English rulers, he investigates the commerce between biblical
interpretation, readership, and literary culture. Whereas scholars
have often drawn exclusively on modern editions of the King James
Version, Fulton turns our attention toward the specific Bibles that
writers used and the specific manner in which they used them. In
doing so, he argues that Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, and others
were in conversation not just with the biblical text itself, but
with the rich interpretive and paratextual structures that
accompanied it, revolving around sites of social controversy as
well as the larger, often dynastically oriented conditions under
which particular Bibles were created.
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