| Modes of Creativity: Philosophical Perspectives Publication Date: December 10, 2010In this philosophical exploration of creativity, Irving Singer describes the many different types of creativity and their varied manifestations within and across all the arts and sciences. Singer's approach is pluralistic rather than abstract or dogmatic. His reflections amplify recent discoveries in cognitive science and neurobiology by aligning them with the aesthetic, affective, and phenomenological framework of experience and behavior that characterizes the human quest for meaning. Creativity has long fascinated Singer, and in Modes of Creativity he car...
| | The Key of Green: Passion and Perception in Renaissance Culture Publication Date: December 15, 2008| ISBN-10: 0226763781 | ISBN-13: 978-0226763781| Edition: 1 From Shakespeare’s “green-eyed monster” to the “green thought in a green shade” in Andrew Marvell’s “The Garden,” the color green was curiously prominent and resonant in English culture of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Among other things, green was the most common color of household goods, the recommended wall color against which to view paintings, the hue that was supposed to appear in alchemical processes at the moment base metal turn...
| | "I have always loved the Holy Tongue": Isaac Casaubon, the Jews, and a Forgotten Chapter in Renaissance Scholarship (Carl Newell Jackson Lectures) Publication Date: January 3, 2011| Series: Carl Newell Jackson LecturesFusing high scholarship with high drama, Anthony Grafton and Joanna Weinberg uncover a secret and extraordinary aspect of a legendary Renaissance scholar’s already celebrated achievement. The French Protestant Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614) is known to us through his pedantic namesake in George Eliot’s Middlemarch. But in this book, the real Casaubon emerges as a genuine literary hero, an intrepid explorer in the world of books. With a flair for storytelling reminiscent of Umberto Eco, Grafton and Weinberg...
| | Renaissance Realism: Narrative Images in Literature and Art Publication Date: March 27, 2003| ISBN-10: 0199259585 | ISBN-13: 978-0199259588Early narratives have tended to be critiqued as novels, an approach that misses their distinctive Renaissance realism. Alastair Fowler surveys picturing and perspective from the fifteenth century to the eighteenth, drawing analogies between literature and visual art. The book is based on the history of the narrative imagination after single-point perspective. The habit of an older, multi-point perspective long continued, accounting for "anachronism," discontinuous realism, "double time-schemes," and depiction ...
| | A Moving Rhetoricke: Gender and Silence in Early Modern England Release Date: April 15, 2011The complex history of silence provides an important framework for rethinking gender in early modern England and for challenging critical approaches to it. Based on an investigation of a wide range of contemporary sources, from domestic conduct guides to emblem books, this study offers fresh perspectives on both culture and literature. Traditionally a sign of impotence, eloquence or defiance, increasingly associated with the inscrutable private subject, silence was an unstable and contested site of meaning for early modern men and women alike. Masculine silence fr...
| | Ashgate Critical Essays on Women Writers in England, 1550-1700: Volume 4 Publication Date: August 1, 2009| ISBN-10: 0754660826 | ISBN-13: 978-0754660828The last twenty-five years have seen exciting new developments in scholarly work on Lady Mary Wroth, whose "Urania" and "Pamphilia to Amphilanthus" constitute the first romance and the first sonnet sequence to be published by an Englishwoman. Wroth's writings enter into a suggestive and gendered dialogue with the lyric and narrative works of her uncle, Sir Philip Sidney, even as they carve out a place for her own literary experiments. This volume gathers together some of the most striking recent criticism addr...
| | Catholicism, Controversy and the English Literary Imagination, 1558-1660 Publication Date: November 2, 2006| ISBN-10: 0521032148 | ISBN-13: 978-0521032148The Catholic contribution to English literary culture has been widely neglected or misunderstood. This book sets out to rehabilitate a wide range of Catholic imaginative writing, while exposing the role of anti-Catholicism as an imaginative stimulus to mainstream writers in Tudor and Stuart England. It discusses canonical figures such as Sidney, Spenser, Webster and Middleton alongside many lesser-known writers. Alison Shell explores the Catholic rhetoric of loyalism and apostasy, and the stimulus given to t...
| | Sonnets and Shorter Poems Publication Date: February 1, 2012In this volume, David R. Slavitt, the distinguished translator and author of more than one hundred works of fiction, poetry, and drama, turns his skills to Il Canzoniere (Songbook) by Petrarch, the most influential poet in the history of the sonnet. In Petrarch’s hands, lyric verse was transformed from an expression of courtly devotion into a way of conversing with one’s own heart and mind. Slavitt renders the sonnets in Il Canzoniere, along with the shorter madrigals and ballate, in a sparkling and engaging idiom and in rhythm and rhyme that do ...
| | Music in Medieval Manuscripts Publication Date: December 29, 2001Our knowledge of medieval music - from the dramatic and melodic riches of the thirteenth century to such highlights of the fifteenth century as the pieces in the Old Hall Manuscript - rests almost wholly on the existence of the manuscripts that have survived. Many illuminated manuscripts similarly contain detailed depictions of musicians with their instruments providing a valuable source of reference for performers today. A lively introduction to all aspects of medieval music for anyone who enjoys listening to works of the period. ...
| | Irony's Edge: The Theory and Politics of Irony Publication Date: December 15, 1994| ISBN-10: 0415054532 | ISBN-13: 978-0415054539| Edition: First Edition The edge of irony, says Linda Hutcheon, is always a social and political edge. Irony depends upon interpretation; it happens in the tricky, unpredictable space between expression and understanding.Irony's Edge is a fascinating, compulsively readable study of the myriad forms and the effects of irony. It sets out, for the first time, a sustained, clear analysis of the theory and the political contexts of irony, using a wide range of references from contemporary culture. Examples ex...
| | Preface to Paradise Lost Publication Date: March 1, 2006A Preface to Paradise Lost provides an interpretation of Milton's purpose in writing the epic. --This text refers to the Paperback edition....
| | Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene: A Reading Guide (Reading Guides to Long Poems) Publication Date: July 26, 2011| Series: Reading Guides to Long Poems Designed for students who are new to Spenser's masterpiece, as well as for instructors who seek strategies for teaching it, this guide offers an innovative introduction toThe Faerie Queene and its complex construction. Through a representative selection of excerpts from the poem, Andrew Zurcher lays out the skills and interpretive methods students will need to absorb key themes and techniques. He includes relevant contexts and related texts, which not only enhance the reading experience for newcomers but also help develop ...
| | Rape of the Lock (Bedford Cultural Editions) Publication Date: April 20, 1998| Series: Bedford Cultural Editions This edition of a classic eighteenth-century poem reprints both the original 1712 version and enlarged 1714 version of the text. The poem is accompanied by 150 pages of documents on life in eighteenth-century England, giving a rich sense of the work's historical and cultural context. ...
| | Christopher Marlowe: A Renaissance Life Release Date: September 9, 2010Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593) emerges in most accounts of his life by biographers and critics as a mysterious and sensational action figure, a hapless pawn of circumstance, or a pseudonymous cipher. Constance Brown Kuriyama's new biography reconstructs the eventful life of a radically innovative playwright who flourished briefly and died violently more than four hundred years ago, yet persists in the romantic imagination even today.Many discoveries about Marlowe's life have emerged over the past hundred years. The author here supplements these findings with n...
| | The Building in the Text: Alberti to Shakespeare and Milton Publication Date: December 1, 2000| ISBN-10: 0271020229 | ISBN-13: 978-0271020228In The Building in the Text, Roy Eriksen shows that Renaissance writers conceived of their texts in accordance with architectural principles. His approach opens the way to wide-ranging discussions of the structure and meaning of a variety of literary texts and also provides new insights into the famed architectural ekphrases of Alberti and Vasari. Analyzing such words as 'plot,' 'topos,' 'fabrica,' and 'stanza,' Eriksen discloses the fundamental spatial symmetries and complexities in the writings of Ariosto,...
| | Composers at Work: The Craft of Musical Composition 1450-1600 Publication Date: November 19, 1998How did Renaissance composers write their music? In this revolutionary look at a subject that has fascinated scholars for years, musicologist Jessie Ann Owens offers new and striking evidence that contrary to accepted theory, sixteenth-century composers did not use scores to compose--even to write complex vocal polyphony.Drawing on sources that include contemporary theoretical treatises, documents and letters, iconographical evidence, actual fragments of composing slates, and numerous sketches, drafts, and corrected autograph manuscripts, Owens carefully re...
| | Infinity, Faith and Time: Christian Humanism and Renaissance Literature (Mcgill-Queen's Studies in the History of Religion) Publication Date: November 1997| Series: Mcgill-Queen's Studies in the History of Religion This text is an exploration of Renaissance literature and the importance of a powerful tradition of Christian-Platonist rational spirituality derived from St. Augustine and Nicholas of Cusa. John Spencer Hill argues that this tradition had a formative role in the thought of Renaissance writers by enabling them to assimilate into their world view two central discoveries of the Renaissance - that the universe is infinite and that human existance is bound and regulated by the passage of time. ...
| | Pastoral Themes and Forms in Cervantes's Fiction ...
| | Thomas Middleton: His Collaborators (Writers and their Work) Release Date: October 19, 2010| ISBN-10: 0746310803 | ISBN-13: 978-0746310809| Edition: New Middleton and his Collaborators explores the career of one of the most prominent and versatile writers of the early seventeenth century. Throughout his working life Thomas Middleton worked in collaboration with several contemporaries notably Thomas Dekker, William Shakespeare, and William Rowley. The book devotes chapters to each, and examines in detail Middleton and Dekker's The Roaring Girl, his intertextual relations with Shakespeare, and arguably his masterpiece, The Changeling, written with R...
| | Locus Amoenus: Gardens and Horticulture in the Renaissance (Renaissance Studies Special Issues) Publication Date: April 3, 2012| ISBN-10: 1444361511 | ISBN-13: 978-1444361513| Edition: 1 Locus Amoenus provides a pioneering collection of new perspectives on Renaissance garden history, and the impact of its development. Experts in the field illustrate the extent of our knowledge of how the natural world looked and how humans related to their environment.A ground-breaking collection of new perspectives on garden historyEssays demonstrate the extent of our knowledge of how the natural world looked and how humans related to their environmentThe book's broad coverage includes botany and ...
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