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Although the history of the book is a booming area of research, the
journeymen who printed books in the sixteenth century have remained
shadowy figures because they were not thought to have left any
significant traces in the archives. Clive Griffin, however, uses
Inquisitional documents from Spain and Portugal to reveal a
clandestine network of Protestant-minded immigrant journeymen who
were arrested by the Holy Office in Spain and Portugal in the 1560s
and 1570s at a time of international crisis. A startlingly clear
portrait of these humble men (and occasionally women) emerges
allowing the reconstruction of what Namier deemed one of history's
greatest challenges: 'the biographies of ordinary men'. We learn of
their geographical and social origins, educational and professional
training, travels, careers, standard of living, violent behaviour,
and even their attitudes, beliefs, and ambitions.
In the course of this study, many other subjects are addressed,
among them: popular culture and religion; the history of skilled
labour, the history of the book, and of reading and writing; the
Inquisition; foreign and itinerant workers and the xenophobia they
encountered; and the 'double lives' of lower-class Protestants
living within a uniquely vigilant Catholic society.
A guide to the interpretation of the Golden-Age ballad. Collections
of traditional Spanish ballads were made in the early seventeenth
century; some recorded directly from singers, others reworked by
educated poets. So popular were these that Court poets composed
ballads of their own. Most Spanish poetry of the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries circulated in manuscript among a small
coterie of wits and fellow poets, and it often contains references
to contemporary events and people, sideswipes at institutionsand
individuals, and allusions to other writings of the time. The
modern reader has to know about the people and events criticized
and lampooned, and everything from municipal by-laws to
contemporary painting can prove helpful. The traditional popular
associations of the ballad also led to many poets combining in
their poems the language of the street alongside that of polite
society and the schoolroom. This volume discusses some of the
problems encountered by anglophone students and teachers of
literature when they turn to the Golden-Age ballad and offers
informed guidance on how such poems might be read. The nine poems
discussed have been chosen with such difficulties in mind and a
strophe-by-strophe prose translation is provided for each, followed
by a detailed critical analysis. Edited by NIGEL GRIFFIN, CLIVE
GRIFFIN, ERIC SOUTHWORTH and COLIN THOMPSON, all of Oxford
University. OTHER CONTRIBUTORS: Oliver Noble-Wood, John Rutherford,
Ronald Truman.
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Paperback
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R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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