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What can I do? To what degree do we control our own desires,
actions, and fate - or not? These questions haunt us, and have done
so, in various forms, for thousands of years. Timothy Rosendale
explores the problem of human will and action relative to the
Divine - which Luther himself identified as the central issue of
the Reformation - and its manifestations in English literary texts
from 1580-1670. After an introduction which outlines the broader
issues from Sophocles and the Stoics to twentieth-century
philosophy, the opening chapter traces the theological history of
the agency problem from the New Testament to the seventeenth
century. The following chapters address particular aspects of
volition and salvation (will, action, struggle, and blame) in the
writings of Marlowe, Kyd, Shakespeare, Ford, Herbert, Donne, and
Milton, who tackle these problems with an urgency and depth that
resonate with parallel concerns today.
The Book of Common Prayer is one of the most important and
influential books in English history, but it has received
relatively little attention from literary scholars. This study
seeks to remedy this by attending to the prayerbook's importance in
England's political, intellectual, religious, and literary history.
The first half of the book presents extensive analyses of the Book
of Common Prayer's involvement in early modern discourses of
nationalism and individualism, and argues that the liturgy sought
to engage and textually reconcile these potentially competing
cultural impulses. In its second half, Liturgy and Literature
traces these tensions in subsequent works by four major authors -
Sidney, Shakespeare, Milton, and Hobbes - and contends that they
operate within the dialectical parameters laid out in the
prayerbook decades earlier. Rosendale's analyses are supplemented
by a brief history of the Book of Common Prayer, and by an appendix
which discusses its contents.
The Book of Common Prayer is one of the most important and
influential books in English history, but it has received
relatively little attention from literary scholars. This study
seeks to remedy this by attending to the prayerbook's importance in
England's political, intellectual, religious, and literary history.
The first half of the book presents extensive analyses of the Book
of Common Prayer's involvement in early modern discourses of
nationalism and individualism, and argues that the liturgy sought
to engage and textually reconcile these potentially competing
cultural impulses. In its second half, Liturgy and Literature
traces these tensions in subsequent works by four major authors -
Sidney, Shakespeare, Milton, and Hobbes - and contends that they
operate within the dialectical parameters laid out in the
prayerbook decades earlier. Rosendale's analyses are supplemented
by a brief history of the Book of Common Prayer, and by an appendix
which discusses its contents.
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