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E-grāmata: Oxford Handbook of Holinshed's Chronicles [Oxford Handbooks Online E-books]

Edited by (Fellow and Tutor in English, Jesus College Oxford), Edited by (Emeritus Fellow in History, Jesus College Oxford and Fellow of the British Academy), Edited by (Fellow and Tutor in History, Keble College Oxford)
  • Formāts: 812 pages, 22 black-and-white halftones
  • Sērija : Oxford Handbooks
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Dec-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780191750533
  • Oxford Handbooks Online E-books
  • Cena pašlaik nav zināma
  • Formāts: 812 pages, 22 black-and-white halftones
  • Sērija : Oxford Handbooks
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Dec-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780191750533
The Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland (1577, 1587), issued under the name of Raphael Holinshed, was the crowning achievement of Tudor historiography, and became the principal source for the historical writings of Spenser, Daniel and, above all, Shakespeare. While scholars have long been drawn to Holinshed for its qualities as a source, they typically dismissed it as a baggy collection of materials, lacking coherent form and analytical insight. This condescending verdict has only recently given way to an appreciation of the literary and historical qualities of these chronicles.

The Handbook is a major interdisciplinary undertaking which gives the lie to Holinshed's detractors, and provides original interpretations of a book that has lacked sustained academic scrutiny. Bringing together leading specialists in a variety of fields - literature, history, religion, classics, bibliography, and the history of the book - the Handbook demonstrates that the Chronicles powerfully reflect the nature of Tudor thinking about the past, about politics and society, and about the literary and rhetorical means by which readers might be persuaded of the truth of narrative. The volume shows how distinctive it was for one book to chronicle the history of three nations of the British archipelago.

The various sections of the Handbook analyze the making of the two editions of the Chronicles; the relationship of the work to medieval and early modern historiography; its formal properties, genres and audience; attitudes to politics, religion, and society; literary appropriations; and the parallel descriptions and histories of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. The result is a seminal study that shows unequivocally the vitality and complexity of the chronicle form in the late sixteenth century.
List of Illustrations
xiii
List of Tables
xv
Abbreviations xvii
Note on References to the Chronicles xix
Tim Smith-Laing
Notes on Contributors xxiii
Prologue xxix
Ian W. Archer
Felicity Heal
Paulina Kewes
PART I THE MAKING OF HOLINSHED
1 The Genesis of the Two Editions
3(18)
Felicity Heal
Henry Summerson
2 Printers, Publishers, and the Chronicles as Artefact
21(22)
Aaron T. Pratt
David Scott Kastan
3 Censorship
43(18)
Cyndia Susan Clegg
4 Sources: 1577
61(16)
Henry Summerson
5 Sources: 1587
77(16)
Henry Summerson
6 Harrison's `Chronology' and Descriptions of Britain
93(18)
Glyn Parry
7 Illustrations in the 1577 Edition
111(24)
James A. Knapp
PART II HISTORIOGRAPHY
8 Holinshed and the Native Chronicle Tradition
135(18)
Alexandra Gillespie
Oliver Harris
9 Holinshed and Mythical History
153(18)
Laura Ashe
10 Holinshed and the Middle Ages
171(16)
Harriet Archer
11 Harrison and Leland
187(16)
James P. Carley
12 Holinshed and Hall
203(14)
Scott Lucas
13 Holinshed and Foxe
217(18)
Thomas S. Freeman
Susannah Brietz Monta
14 Later Historians and Holinshed
235(16)
Wyman H. Herendeen
15 The Wider World of Chronicling
251(16)
Daniel Woolf
PART III FORM, STYLE, AND RECEPTION
16 Genres
267(18)
Tricia A. McElroy
17 Rhetoric
285(18)
Jennifer Richards
18 Holinshed and the Classics
303(16)
Judith Mossman
19 Shows and Pageants
319(18)
Elizabeth Goldring
Jayne Elisabeth Archer
20 Narrative Voice and Influencing the Reader
337(18)
Matthew Woodcock
21 Readership and Reception
355(20)
Felicity Heal
PART IV POLITICS, SOCIETY, AND RELIGION
22 Monarchy
375(14)
John Watts
23 Social Order and Disorder
389(22)
Ian W. Archer
24 Religious Ideology
411(16)
Peter Marshall
25 Providentialism
427(16)
Alexandra Walsham
26 War
443(16)
Paul E. J. Hammer
27 The International Context
459(16)
Steven Gunn
28 Tudor Kings and Queens
475(18)
Susan Doran
PART V LITERARY APPROPRIATIONS
29 History Plays and the Royal Succession
493(18)
Paulina Kewes
30 Shakespeare and Medieval History
511(16)
Igor Djordjevic
31 Shakespeare and British History
527(16)
Richard Dutton
32 Spenser and Holinshed
543(16)
Richard A. McCabe
33 Daniel and Holinshed
559(16)
Gillian Wright
34 Later Appropriations
575(18)
Bart Van Es
PART VI ARCHIPELAGIC HOLINSHED
35 Archipelagic History
593(16)
Philip Schwyzer
36 Mapping England and Wales
609(20)
Alfred Hiatt
37 England
629(18)
Ralph Houlbrooke
38 Scotland
647(16)
Roger Mason
39 Ireland
663(16)
Colm Lennon
40 Wales
679(16)
Ralph Griffiths
Appendix A Contents of the Two Editions of the Chronicles by signature 695(6)
Tim Smith-Laing
Appendix B Raphael Holinshed: New Light on a Shadowy Life 701(6)
Henry Summerson
Bibliography of Secondary Works 707(32)
Index 739
Paulina Kewes is Fellow and Tutor in English Literature at Jesus College, Oxford, and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Her research interests focus on early modern drama, politics, and historiography. She is the author of Authorship and Appropriation: Writing for the Stage in England, 1660-1710 (1998) and, editor or co-editor of Plagiarism in Early Modern England (2003), The Uses of History in Early Modern England (2006), and The Question of Succession in Late Elizabethan England (2013).



Ian W. Archer has been Fellow and Tutor in History at Keble College, Oxford since 1991. His primary research interests lie in the history of early modern London, and he has also published on history and memory. He is a Literary Director of the Royal Historical Society.



Felicity Heal is an Emeritus Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford. Her research interests lie in the religious history of Britain and Ireland during the Reformation, in the social history of the gentry, and in gift giving and reciprocity in early modern England. She has written extensively on all these subjects. She is consultant editor for the sixteenth-century section of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. She is a Fellow of the British Academy.