The Cambridge Companion to Writing of the English RevolutionN. H. Keeble Cambridge University Press, 17/09/2001 This collection of fifteen essays by leading scholars examines the extraordinary diversity and richness of the writing produced in response to, and as part of, the upheaval in the religious, political and cultural life of the nation which constituted the English Revolution. The turmoil of the civil wars fought out from 1639 to 1651, the shock of the execution of Charles I, and the uncertainty of the succeeding period of constitutional experiment were enacted and refigured in writing which both shaped and was shaped by the tumultuous times. The various strategies of this battle of the books are explored through essays on the course of events, intellectual trends and the publishing industry; in discussions of canonical figures such as Milton, Marvell, Bunyan and Clarendon; and in accounts of women's writing and of fictional and non-fictional prose. A full chronology, detailed guides to further reading and a glossary are included. |
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... 1st Duke of Buckingham, favourite of Charles I 1630 Birth ofCharles,Prince of Wales, afterwards Charles II(29 May) 1630s Periodof Charles I's personal rule without a Parliament 1633 Laud becomes archbishop of Canterbury Birth of James ...
... 1st Duke of Buckingham, favourite of Charles I 1630 Birth ofCharles,Prince of Wales, afterwards Charles II(29 May) 1630s Periodof Charles I's personal rule without a Parliament 1633 Laud becomes archbishop of Canterbury Birth of James ...
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... Charles I's attemptedarrestoffive members of the Houseof Commons (2 January) Charles Iwithdraws from London toYork(19March) Charles I raises his standard at Nottingham (22 August) Battleof Edgehill (23 October; inconclusive) 1643 ...
... Charles I's attemptedarrestoffive members of the Houseof Commons (2 January) Charles Iwithdraws from London toYork(19March) Charles I raises his standard at Nottingham (22 August) Battleof Edgehill (23 October; inconclusive) 1643 ...
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... Charles to exclude his Roman Catholic brother, James, from the succession 1680 Publication of Bunyan's TheLife and ... II 1688 'Glorious Revolution' (deposition of James II (11 December) and accessionof Charles I's grandson William III ...
... Charles to exclude his Roman Catholic brother, James, from the succession 1680 Publication of Bunyan's TheLife and ... II 1688 'Glorious Revolution' (deposition of James II (11 December) and accessionof Charles I's grandson William III ...
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... Charles I. So we return to our startingpoint.An assiduous reader of everything published in Englandorin English inthe 1630s would findlittle evidence of a polity crumblinginto civil war. And yetby 1642 there ... Charles I's accession to the.
... Charles I. So we return to our startingpoint.An assiduous reader of everything published in Englandorin English inthe 1630s would findlittle evidence of a polity crumblinginto civil war. And yetby 1642 there ... Charles I's accession to the.
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N. H. Keeble. The problem king In 1625, Charles I's accession to the thrones of England, Scotland and Ireland was the most untroubled in any of those kingdoms sincethe fourteenth century. He was only the second of eight Stuart rulers ...
N. H. Keeble. The problem king In 1625, Charles I's accession to the thrones of England, Scotland and Ireland was the most untroubled in any of those kingdoms sincethe fourteenth century. He was only the second of eight Stuart rulers ...
Índice
the press and the Civil | |
Radical pamphleteering | |
Miltons prose and the Revolution | |
DAVID LOEWENSTEIN 6 Andrew Marvell and theRevolution | |
Womens poetry SUSAN WISEMAN | |
Prophecy enthusiasm and female pamphleteers | |
Royalist lyric | |
the literature of the proscribed episcopal | |
Rethinking the | |
Bunyan and the Holy | |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Abraham Cowley Andrew Marvell andthe Anglican Anne Areopagitica Arminianism Army autobiography Basingstoke Bradstreet Bunyan bythe Cambridge Companion Cambridge University Press Cavendish Censorship century Charles I’s church CivilWar Clarendon Press Commonwealth constitution contemporary Cowley Cromwell Cromwell’s culture David debate Diggers early modern edited Eikon Basilike English Civil English Civil War English Revolution epic fromthe Gerrard Winstanley God’s Henry Vaughan Herbert’s Hobbes husband inthe John Katherine Philips King King’s Levellers liberty literary Literature London Long Parliament Lord Lovelace’s Lucy Hutchinson manuscript Margaret Cavendish Marvell Marvell’s Milton monarchy Norbrook ofhis ofthe onthe Oxford pamphlets Paradise Lost Parliament Parliamentarian Philips poem poet poetry polemical political Presbyterian printed prose Protectorate Protestant Publication published Puritan Quaker radical Ranters readers Reformation Religion religious Republic Republican Restoration Revolutionary Richard romance Royalist seventeenth SeventeenthCentury England Spirit texts thatthe Thomas tobe tothe tracts UniversityPress Vaughan William Winstanley withthe women Writing