Masculinity and Emotion in Early Modern English LiteratureRoutledge, 5. 12. 2016 - 256 strán (strany) The first full length treatment of how men of different professions, social ranks and ages are empowered by their emotional expressiveness in early modern English literary works, this study examines the profound impact of the cultural shift in the English aristocracy from feudal warriors to emotionally expressive courtiers or gentlemen on all kinds of men in early modern English literature. Jennifer Vaught bases her analysis on the epic, lyric, and romance as well as on drama, pastoral writings and biography, by Shakespeare, Spenser, Sidney, Marlowe, Jonson and Garrick among other writers. Offering new readings of these works, she traces the gradual emergence of men of feeling during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, to the blossoming of this literary version of manhood during the eighteenth century. |
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Strana
... response to papers I delivered there. These conferences included meetings of the International Spenser Society in Toronto, the Renaissance Society of America in San Francisco, the International Congress on Medieval Studies at Western ...
... response to papers I delivered there. These conferences included meetings of the International Spenser Society in Toronto, the Renaissance Society of America in San Francisco, the International Congress on Medieval Studies at Western ...
Strana
... response to myriad historical, cultural, and religious factors.6 Genre also influences the impact of gender on emotional expressiveness. The following episodes from Book III of Spenser's epic The Faerie Queene (1590) and Shakespeare's ...
... response to myriad historical, cultural, and religious factors.6 Genre also influences the impact of gender on emotional expressiveness. The following episodes from Book III of Spenser's epic The Faerie Queene (1590) and Shakespeare's ...
Strana
... response to Leontes' false claim that she is guilty of adultery, Hermione proclaims with dignity over the loss of her husband's faith that she has “that honourable grief lodg'd here which burns / Worse than tears drown.” Hermione's ...
... response to Leontes' false claim that she is guilty of adultery, Hermione proclaims with dignity over the loss of her husband's faith that she has “that honourable grief lodg'd here which burns / Worse than tears drown.” Hermione's ...
Strana
... response to the sexual or rhetorical authority of women, but others voice comparatively less or little such anxiety. I build on current discussions of the literary formation of masculine identities in the early modern period by ...
... response to the sexual or rhetorical authority of women, but others voice comparatively less or little such anxiety. I build on current discussions of the literary formation of masculine identities in the early modern period by ...
Strana
... response to specific historical factors. As we know, various individuals are not necessarily passive in the midst of these transformations. Those who contest and revise their culture's expectations about how men and women ought to ...
... response to specific historical factors. As we know, various individuals are not necessarily passive in the midst of these transformations. Those who contest and revise their culture's expectations about how men and women ought to ...
Obsah
Spensers Dialogic Feminine Voice | |
Stoical Anger in Jonsons | |
Emotional Kings and their Stoical Usurpers | |
Woeful Rhetoric | |
Chivalric Knights Courtiers and Shepherds Prone | |
Lyrical Private Expressions | |
Demonstrative Family Men Masculinity | |
Lamentable Men in Shakespeares | |
Peddling MiddleClass Values by Shedding | |
Postscript | |
Index | |
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Aemilia Lanyer Aeneid affection alludes androgyny anxiety Arcadia argues aristocratic audience Augustinian Ben Jonson Bolingbroke Book Calepine Calidore Cambridge University Press contrast courtiers critics death Despair dialogic discussion Donne’s Early Modern England edited Edward II effeminacy effeminate eighteenthcentury Elizabeth emotional expressiveness emotionally expressive emphasis English Renaissance epic episode exclaims Faerie Queene female feminine Feminism figure Florizel and Perdita Folger Shakespeare Library Fradubio Garrick Gaveston gender grief Hermione Hermione’s imagines intertextual John Donne Jonson King King’s laments Lanyer Legend of Courtesy Leontes London lyric male Mamillius man’s manhood Marlowe masculinity and emotion medieval Metamorphoses Mortimer mourning Musidorus Ovid passion Paulina Perdita Philoclea poem poet political Polixenes Pyrocles Quintilian Redcrosse Redcrosse’s response rhetoric Richard II romance seventeenth century Shakespeare Shakespeare’s play Shakespeare’s Richard Shakespeare’s Winter’s Tale Sidney Sidney’s Spenser stoical Stoicism Tamburlaine tears texts Timber versions of masculinity violent voice Walton Wandering Wood warrior weep and wail Winter’s Tale women writers York