The Cambridge History of English Literature: The drama to 1642, pt. 1-2
Author: Alfred Rayney Waller
Publisher:
Published: 1910
Total Pages: 622
ISBN-13:
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Author: Alfred Rayney Waller
Publisher:
Published: 1910
Total Pages: 622
ISBN-13:
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Publisher:
Published: 1918
Total Pages: 536
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Sir Adolphus William Ward
Publisher:
Published: 1910
Total Pages: 620
ISBN-13:
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Publisher:
Published: 2000
Total Pages:
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DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: A. W. Ward
Publisher: CUP Archive
Published: 1969
Total Pages: 428
ISBN-13: 9780521045209
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Jane Milling
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2004
Total Pages: 574
ISBN-13: 0521650682
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Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1919
Total Pages: 608
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: George Sampson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 1970-02-02
Total Pages: 998
ISBN-13: 9780521095815
DOWNLOAD EBOOKBased on The Cambridge history of English literature.
Author: Nicholas McDowell
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2003
Total Pages: 262
ISBN-13: 9780199260515
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe English Radical Imagination addresses current critical assumptions about the nature of radical thought and expression during the English Revolution. Through a combination of biographical and literary interpretation, it revises the representation of radical writers in this period asignorant and uneducated 'tub preachers'. This representation has become a critical orthodoxy since Christopher Hill's seminal study, The World Turned Upside Down (1972). Despite the reservations of so-called 'revisionist' historians about the misleading implications of Hill's work, culturalhistorians and literary critics have continued to view radical texts as authentic artefacts of a form of early modern popular culture. This book challenges the divide between 'elite' and 'popular' culture in the seventeenth century. While research has revealed that the rank and file of the more organized radical movements was composed of the lower 'middling sort' of people who had little or no access to the elite intellectualculture of the period, some of the most important and most discussed radical writers had been to university in the 1620s and 1630s. Chapters 1-2 investigate how critics - especially those sympathetic to the radicals - have tended to repeat hostile contemporary stereotypes of the ideologists andpublicists of radicalism as 'illiterate Mechanick persons'. The failure to recognize the elite cultural background of these writers has resulted in a failure to acknowledge the range of their intellectual and rhetorical resources and, consequently, in a misrepresentation of the sophistication ofboth their ideas and their writing. Chapters 3-5 are case studies of some of the most important and innovative radical writers. They show how these writers use their experience of an orthodox humanist education for the purposes of satire and ridicule and how they interpret texts associated with orthodox ideologies and culturalpractices to produce heterodox arguments. Radical prose of the English Revolution thus emerges as a more complex literary phenomenon than has hitherto been supposed, lending substance to recent claims for its admission to the traditional literary canon.
Author: Ontario. Legislative Library
Publisher:
Published: 1913
Total Pages: 942
ISBN-13:
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