Reading the Renaissance: Ideas and Idioms from Shakespeare to MiltonMarc Berley Duquesne University Press, 2003 - 278 Seiten Reading the Renaissance is a timely and compelling answer to a decades-long attack on literature by various schools of critical theory. A collection of new and provocative essays by prominent scholars, it speaks eloquently to the enduring value of Renaissance literature and literary study. Reading Renaissance literature requires what Edward W. Tayler calls "literary tact," the willingness to allow poets their own ideas. A reader might best come to understand Renaissance writers by attending, again and again, to their ideas, idioms, and intentions. "Reading," writes Marc Berley, "is a dangerous act, for how we confront another's genius reveals much about ourselves." The contributors here--Frank Kermode, Marc Berley, Michael Mack, Louis L. Martz, Albert C. Labriola, Anne Lake Prescott, Stanley Stewart, Ernest B. Gilman, Martin Elsky, Anthony Low, Edward W. Tayler--hold that the author, not the critic, is supreme, that the aim of a reader should be, as Ben Jonson urged, to "understand." These scholars focus on the various Renaissance authors they consider, not contemporary theories or schools that might seem to offer totalizing safety. They are committed to the thrill of reading the Renaissance--not the power of rewriting it. This commitment, not coincidentally, leads them to authoritative new readings of major texts. Reading the Renaissance makes a powerful corrective statement about the direction in which Renaissance literary studies should go in the wake of critical theory. Unabashed in detailing wrong turns made by critical theory in recent years, this book will doubtless make waves. But it will be most appreciated for its own considerable accomplishments. The essays here are exemplary--signs of how rich, joyous, and indeed critical, engagement with the Renaissance can be in the twenty-first century. |
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... kind nursery , but he knows instead to give it : " Wipe thine eyes . / The goodyears shall devour them , flesh and fell , / Ere they shall make us weep ! We'll see ' em starved first . / Come . ” ( 23-26 ) . This is not evasion . It is ...
... kind of civil disorder reported in ac- counts of urban epidemics going back to Thucydides and Boccaccio . Sin on such a scale required divine retribution to be seconded by official vigilance . In the response of the court and the city ...
... kind . Suspicious of faction , he would consider them potentially divisive . They would undermine absolute power ... kind of life , a more personal , intimate kind of companionship with one another before they 19 fell , is suggested by ...
Inhalt
Jonsons | 12 |
Frank Kermode | 15 |
The Idea of King Lear | 27 |
Urheberrecht | |
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