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Dublin: Renaissance city of literature interrogates the notion of a
literary 'renaissance' in Dublin. Through detailed case studies of
print and literature in Renaissance Dublin, the volume covers
innovative new ground, including quantitative analysis of print
production in Ireland, unique insight into the city's literary
communities and considerations of literary genres that flourished
in early modern Dublin. The volume's broad focus and extended
timeline offer an unprecedented and comprehensive consideration of
the features of renaissance that may be traced to the city from the
fifteenth to the seventeenth century. With contributions from
leading scholars in the area of early modern Ireland, including
Raymond Gillespie and Andrew Hadfield, students and academics will
find the book an invaluable resource for fully appreciating those
elements that contributed to the complex literary character of
Dublin as a Renaissance city of literature. -- .
A renowned Irish poet, Eilean Ni Chuilleanain has published 7
collections of poetry. Born in Cork City in 1942, her collections
include Acts and Monuments (1972), Site of Ambush (1975), The
Second Voyage (1977), The Rose Geranium (1981), The Magdalene
Sermon (1989), The Brazen Serpent (1994) and The Girl Who Married
the Reindeer (2001). This new selection brings together some of her
most distinctive work, published for the first time in the UK.
The seventh instalment in the Poet's Chair series, it is Eilean Ni
Chuilleanain's tenure as Ireland's Professor of Poetry that
provides the pretext for this book, a collection of three essays
exploring the forces that affect the work of every practising poet.
The first essay pays tribute to a valued friend and colleague of Ni
Chuilleanain's, the late Pearse Hutchinson, as well as to the
languages he used and the impact they had even on readers that did
not fully understand them. The second looks at the response of the
reader of poetry and at the often disparaging treatment of the poet
in fiction, from P. G. Wodehouse to Flann O'Brien. In the third
lecture, Ni Chuilleanain returns to her lifelong academic interest
in the poetry of seventeenth-century England and calls on the work
of poets as diverse as Bishop Henry King, Walt Whitman and Thomas
Kinsella to explore poetry's relation to the ceremonies surrounding
death in how it may both comment on and substitute for ritual.
Elegantly designed and masterfully written, Instead of a Shrine
offers a unique opportunity to return to - or, indeed, begin
engaging with - the dynamic world of poetry.
English literature from Chaucer to Milton was produced in a culture
where accusations of heresy were frequently made, and where the
meaning of orthodoxy was unsettled. The essays in this book show
the ways in which ideas about heresy and orthodoxy had their
impact, sometimes fatally, on writers. The various movements -
Lollardy, Bible Protestantism, Calvinist orthodoxy, and antinomian
heresy - produced vital, often eloquent or satiric, writing from
all sides in the recurring debates. The literary genres - where
these issues are important - include autobiography, romance,
history, theology, drama, and poetry.
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