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Renaissance Papers collects the best essays submitted each year to
the Southeastern Renaissance Conference. In the 2007 volume, two
essays focus on Shakespeare's Roman plays: one on Lavinia's death
and Roman suicide in Titus Andronicus, the other on the rhetorical
construction of masculinity in Julius Caesar. Five essays address
the literary implications of seventeenth-century religious belief
and practice, considering the influence of the timing and delivery
of sermons on John Donne, the impact of godly reforms on Thomas
Browne's Religio Medici, the effect of Scottish on English
Presbyterianism during the 1640s, the critique of reformist
utopianism in Margaret Cavendish's The Blazing World, and the
implications of Paradise Lost's lack of a frontispiece. Two essays
on sixteenth-century poetry look at the literary voices of
commoners and of kings: one focuses on the portraits of women and
commoners in A Mirror for Magistrates, while the other examines the
political implications of King James VI/I's metrical translations
of David's Psalms.BR Contributors: Reid Barbour, Nora L. Corrigan,
William A. Coulter, Julie Fann, Robert Kilgore, Sonya Freeman
Loftis, Christopher Hair, Jim Pearce, and John N. Wall M. Thomas
Hester is Professor of English at North Carolina State University,
and Christopher Cobb is Assistant Professor of English at Saint
Mary's College.
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