Strange Communion: Motherland and Masculinity in Tudor Plays, Pamphlets, and PoliticsUniversity of Delaware Press, 2003 - 236 strán (strany) Strange Communion concerns the development in Tudor culture of a tendency to identify the common good with the health of the motherland. Playwrights, polemicists, and politicians such as John Bale, Richard Morison, and William Shakespeare, among others, relied on maternal representations of England to evoke a sense of common purpose. Vanhoutte examines how such motherland tropes came to describe England, how they changed in response to specific political crises, and how they came, by the end of the sixteenth century, to shape literary ideals of masculinity. While Henrician propagandists appealed to Mother England in order to enforce dynastic privilege, their successors modified nationalist symbols as to qualify absolute monarchy. The accessions of two queens thus encouraged a convergence of nationalist and patriarchal ideologies: in late Tudor works, evocations of the national family tend to efface class distinctions while reinforcing gender distinctions. Dr. Jacqueline Vanhoutte is an assistant professor at the University of North Texas. |
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Strana 88
... pamphlets follow suit in using nationalist rhetoric to au- thorize attacks on Mary and the monarchy . They gender En- gland female but , unlike Certayne Questions , habitually construe the country as the audience rather than the speaker ...
... pamphlets follow suit in using nationalist rhetoric to au- thorize attacks on Mary and the monarchy . They gender En- gland female but , unlike Certayne Questions , habitually construe the country as the audience rather than the speaker ...
Strana 89
... pamphlets of the Protestant exiles , invocations of England lead to a claim that Mary has violated various " lawes , " divine and political . The appeal to divine , natural , and positive " lawes " protecting the nation is a convention ...
... pamphlets of the Protestant exiles , invocations of England lead to a claim that Mary has violated various " lawes , " divine and political . The appeal to divine , natural , and positive " lawes " protecting the nation is a convention ...
Strana 102
... pamphlets , John Knox's First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women ( 1558 ) , appeared in the first year of Elizabeth's reign . The Scottish reformer famously argues that " to promote a woman to beare rule ...
... pamphlets , John Knox's First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women ( 1558 ) , appeared in the first year of Elizabeth's reign . The Scottish reformer famously argues that " to promote a woman to beare rule ...
Obsah
Acknowledgments | 9 |
Richard Morison John Bale | 26 |
Gender and Nation in Marian | 61 |
Autorské práva | |
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