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 28
... subjects share an obligation to patrol her boundaries , to protect her chastity , to prevent her penetration . Moreover , the gendered representations of England in Morison's pamphlets and in Bale's King Johan ( 1538 ) define the ...
... subjects share an obligation to patrol her boundaries , to protect her chastity , to prevent her penetration . Moreover , the gendered representations of England in Morison's pamphlets and in Bale's King Johan ( 1538 ) define the ...
Strana 61
... subjects feared that , as Laurence Saunders put it in 1556 , the queen appeared " determined . . . to brynge En- gland into the subjeccion of a foren Prynce . " In contrast to her Tudor predecessors , Mary never fully grasped her subjects ...
... subjects feared that , as Laurence Saunders put it in 1556 , the queen appeared " determined . . . to brynge En- gland into the subjeccion of a foren Prynce . " In contrast to her Tudor predecessors , Mary never fully grasped her subjects ...
Strana 118
... subjects , a point driven home by Elizabeth's subsequent promise to function " as a good mother to [ her ] country . " 60 Elizabeth made her unpopular message palatable through the same trope used to legitimate nationalist intervention ...
... subjects , a point driven home by Elizabeth's subsequent promise to function " as a good mother to [ her ] country . " 60 Elizabeth made her unpopular message palatable through the same trope used to legitimate nationalist intervention ...
Obsah
Acknowledgments | 9 |
Richard Morison John Bale | 26 |
Gender and Nation in Marian | 61 |
Autorské práva | |
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