Renaissance Papers 2004

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2005-04-30
Publisher(s): Camden House
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Summary

Renaissance Papers is a collection of the best scholarly essays submitted each year to the Southeastern Renaissance Conference. The Conference accepts papers on all subjects relating to the Renaissance--music, art, history, literature, etc.--from scholars all over North America and the world. Of the seven essays in the 2004 volume, three have to do with the Metaphysical Poets; among the topics here are the significant use of chiasmus in the poetry of Donne and Herbert, reading Donne's Virginian Company sermon in its context, and the religion of Crashaw. Other essays consider the John Eliot emendation in The Life of King Henry V, the justice and rationality of authority in The Winter's Tale, Marlowe's poetry of allusion and substitution in Hero and Leander, and the shape of Book X of Milton's Paradise Lost. Contributors: Anne Coldiron, Andrew Harvey, Pamela Royston Macfie, Joseph A. Porter, Jeanne Shami, Kay Gilliland Stevenson, and John N. Wall. M. Thomas Hester is professor of English, and Christopher Cobb is assistant professor of English, both at North Carolina State University.

Table of Contents

All Ovids Elegies, the Amores, and the Allusive Close of Marlowe's Hero and Leander
1(16)
Pamela Royston Macfie
Revisiting Shakespeare's Eliot
17(12)
Joseph A. Porter
``'Tis Rigor and Not Law'': Trials of Women as Trials of Patriarchy in The Winter's Tale
29(40)
A. E. B. Coldiron
Crossing Wits: Donne, Herbert, and Sacramental Rhetoric
69(16)
Andrew Harvey
Love and Power: The Rhetorical Motives of John Donne's 1622 Sermon to the Virginia Company
85(22)
Jeanne Shami
Crashaw, Catholicism, and Englishness: Defining Religious Identity
107(20)
John N. Wall
Addendum
127(4)
George Walton Williams
Beyond ``no end'': The Shape of Paradise Lost X
131
Kay Galliland Stevenson

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