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E-grāmata: Work of Form: Poetics and Materiality in Early Modern Culture [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

Edited by (English Teacher, Nottingham High School), Edited by (Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, King's College, London)
  • Formāts: 258 pages, 12 black-and-white illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 10-Jul-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780198702818
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Cena pašlaik nav zināma
  • Formāts: 258 pages, 12 black-and-white illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 10-Jul-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780198702818
The Work of Form: Poetics and Materiality in Early Modern Culture explores the resurgent interest in literary form and aesthetics in early modern english studies. Essays by leading international scholars reflect on the legacy of historicist approaches and on calls for a renewal of formalist analysis as both a tool and as a defence of our object of study as literary critics. This collection addresses the possibilities as well as the challenges of combining these critical traditions; it tests and reflects on these through practice. It also establishes new lines of enquiry by expanding definitions of form to include the material as well as theoretical implications of the term and explores the early modern roots of these connections. The period's most famous poets such as Sidney, Spenser, Shakespeare, Jonson, and Jonson appear alongside Anne Southwell, Thomas Campion, and many anonymous poets and songwriters.

The Work of Form brings together contributors from literary history, historicism, manuscript study, prosodic theory, the history of music, history of the book, as well as print and manuscript culture. It represents avowedly political historical work, alongside aesthetic and theoretical frameworks, work bridging literature and music, and cognitive poetics. In bringing together these diverse commitments, it addresses urgent questions about how we can understand and analyse literary form in a historically-rooted way, and demands rigorous discussion about the status of formal and aesthetic considerations in editing, in literary criticism, and in teaching.
Foreword vii
Nigel Smith
List of Illustrations
xxi
List of Abbreviations
xxiii
Notes on Contributors xxv
Note on the Text xxix
1 The Work of Form: Poetics and Materiality in Early Modern Culture
1(22)
Ben Burton
Elizabeth Scott-Baumann
2 `You may be wondering why I called you all here today': Patterns of Gathering in the Early Modern Lyric
23(16)
Heather Dubrow
3 Allusions and Distinctions: Pentameter Couplets in Ben Jonson's Epigrams and Forest
39(17)
Joshua Scodel
4 Forms of Worship: Shakespeare's Sonnets, Ritual, and the Genealogy of Formalism
56(17)
Ben Burton
5 Bondage and the Lyric: Philosophical and Formal, Renaissance and Modern
73(15)
Richard Strier
6 Thinking in Stanzas: Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece
88(16)
Raphael Lyne
7 A Poetics of Song
104(19)
Katherine R. Larson
8 On the Reuse of Poetic Form: The Ghost in the Shell
123(21)
Gavin Alexander
9 Gender, Reception, and Form: Early Modern Women and the Making of Verse
144(18)
Danielle Clarke
Marie-Louise Coolahan
10 `I haue not time to point yr booke... which I desire you yourselfe to doe': Editing the Form of Early Modern Manuscript Verse
162(17)
Alice Eardley
11 Poetry on the Page: Visual Signalling and the Mind's Ear
179(26)
J. Paul Hunter
The Work of Form: Some Afterwords
197(8)
Angela Leighton
Bibliography 205(20)
Index 225
Elizabeth Scott-Baumann is Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at King's College London. She is the author of Forms of Engagement: Women, Poetry, and Culture 1640-1680 (OUP) and co-edited The Intellectual Culture of Puritan Women (Palgrave, 2010) with Johanna Harris. She is also editing an anthology of Women Poets of the English Civil War for Manchester University Press with Sarah C. E. Ross.

Ben Burton teaches at Nottingham High School and was previously Lecturer in Early Modern English Literature at St Catherine's College, Oxford University. He has published articles on early modern devotional poetry, including an essay which won Renaissance and Reformation's Natalie Zemon Davis prize in 2007.