Centered on the Word: Literature, Scripture, and the Tudor-Stuart Middle Way

Couverture
Daniel W. Doerksen, Christopher Hodgkins
University of Delaware Press, 2004 - 367 pages
The essays in this volume relate in different ways to a central proposition: that the word-centeredness of the Tudor-Stuart Church of England had powerful and subtle effects on the literature produced during and immediately after the reigns of Elizabeth and the early Stuarts. To a degree only now being recognized, that church had at its center leaders who were both Calvinist and moderate. The literary works treated here appeared from the 1590s, in the last Elizabethan decade, to 1652, shortly after the death of Charles I. The essays represent a range of long-recognized major authors: Spenser, Shakespeare, Donne, Herbert, and Milton; but also the more recently canonized Aemilia Lanyer, along with Robert Southwell, a little-known William Baspoole, and a fresh, relatively new discovery in the anonymous female author of Eliza's Babes. Every essay is interdisciplinary: most take the historical setting into account, while others relate literature to philosophy, theology, architecture, and ecclesiastical controversy. Daniel W. Doerksen is Honorary Research Professor at the University of New Brunswick, Canada. Christopher Hodgkins is Associate Professor of English at the University of No
 

Table des matières

Acknowledgments 93
13
A Psalter of Love
28
Faithfulness Fate
50
A Protestant Womans ReVision
73
Luther Cranmer Service and Shakespeare
87
Genre in Early
110
Donne Jeremiah
127
Scripturalist
148
Donnes 1626 Christmas
193
The Textual Church and George
224
William
245
Ecclesiastical Controversy
277
Puritanism Antitheatricalism
298
Puritan
319
Contributors
346
Droits d'auteur

Imperfect Senses
173

Autres éditions - Tout afficher

Expressions et termes fréquents

Informations bibliographiques