How did early modern English people write about themselves, and how do we listen to their voices four centuries later? The authors of Early Modern English Lives: Autobiography and Self-Representation 1500-1660 argue that identity is depicted through complex, subtle, and often contradictory social interactions and literary forms. Diaries, letters, daily spiritual reckonings, household journals, travel journals, accounts of warfare, incidental meditations on the nature of time, death and self-reflection, as well as life stories themselves: these are just some of the texts that allow us to address the social and historical conditions that influenced early modern self-writing. The texts explored in Early Modern English Lives do not automatically speak to our familiar patterns of introspection and self-inquiry. Often formal, highly metaphorical and emotionally restrained, they are very different in both tone and purpose from the autobiographies that crowd bookshelves today. Does the lack of emotional description suggest that complex emotions themselves, in all the depth and variety that we now understand (and expect of) them, are a relatively modern phenomenon? This is one of the questions addressed by Early Modern English Lives. The authors bring to our attention the kinds of rhetorical and generic features of early modern self-representation that can help us to appreciate people living four hundred years ago as the complicated, composite figures they were: people whose expression of identity involved an elaborate interplay of roles and discourses, and for whom the notion of privacy itself was a wholly different phenomenon.
Some entries are very brief while others are extensive. Each includes a source listing. The book is well illustrated and liberally sprinkled with quotations of the time either by or about the women in the text.
4 Hopkins, Shakespeare on the Edge. 5 See: “The Agas Map” for a spectacular digital use of the map itself. 6 Hopkins, Renaissance Drama on the Edge, 171, 8. 7 Hopkins, Renaissance Drama on the Edge, 15. 8 Salzman, Editors Construct the ...
Now in a completely revised edition, this book describes the English language between the years 1500 and 1700 - the different varieites of the language, the attitudes of its speakers towards it, and its pronunciation, vocabulary, and ...
Tudor naturalist, physician and divine. London——New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. Raven, Charles 1947 English naturalists from Neckam to Ray. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Rydén, Mats 1978a Shakespearean plant names.
they continued most of that summer, whither I went daily and visited them and grew more inward with my cousin Frances and Mistress Carey. (2018: 18) Lady Anne here constructs herself as a woman of rank and standing, accompanied by an ...
The book concludes by examining the afterlives of body parts, including relics and specimens exhibited for entertainment and education, contextualized by discussion of the resurrection body and its promise of bodily reintegration.
In Episodes, Ian Maclean investigates the ways in which the book trade operated through book fairs, and interacted with academic institutions, journals and intellectual life in various European settings (Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and ...
Marquis, Paul A. “Oppositional Ideologies of Gender in Isabella Whitney's Copy of a Letter.” Modern Language Review 90 (April 1995): 314-24. Martin, Randall, ed. Women Writers in Renaissance England. New York: 162 Melanie Ann Hanson.
Fabulous Orients: Fictions of the East in England, 1662–1785. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Balserak, J. (2014). ... Sir Thomas Browne: A Life. ... Early Modern English Lives: Autobiography and Selfrepresentation, 1500–1660, ...
Terttu Nevalainen helps students to place the language of the period 1500-1700 in its historical context, whilst showing its regional and social variations.