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In War, Liberty, and Caesar, Edward Paleit discusses how readers
and writers of the English Renaissance read and understood Lucan's
(Marcus Annaeus Lucanus, c. AD 39 - 65) epic poem on the Roman
civil wars. It argues that the period between 1580 and 1650 in
England, during which his text was much read, edited, discussed,
imitated, translated, and quarreled over, can arguably be termed as
the 'age of Lucan'. Looking at engagements with Lucan across a wide
variety of literary forms, including poetry, drama, translations,
and prose treatises, Paleit questions what made this Latin author
so relevant during this period. Are there common features to the
way readers responded to him? In what ways did Lucan help readers
to structure and come to terms with their political experiences?
Among major English authors discussed are Christopher Marlowe, Ben
Jonson, Samuel Daniel, Philip Massinger, and Thomas May. As well as
examining the factors that shaped Lucan for early modern readers -
for example London literary communities, or the reading practices
instilled by humanist pedagogy - Paleit examines Lucan's impact on
debates over the English constitution and the nature of freedom,
his use as a war poet by militaristically inclined readers, and the
perverse thrill many readers experienced on encountering his
blood-curdling descriptions of the horrific and unnatural.
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