Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr is Associate Professor of English at Pennsylvania State University. A recipient of a National Endowment of the Humanities/Folger Shakespeare Library long-term fellowship, he is the author of The Drama of Landscape: Land, Property, and Social Relations on the Early Modern Stage, is on the editorial board for Renaissance Drama, and is Associate Editor of Shakespeare Studies. He has published articles on Shakespeare, Marlowe, Marston, Spenser and others in a number of journals including ELH, Shakespeare Quarterly and Renaissance Drama, and has contributed to The Cambridge Companion to English Literature, 1500-1600 (1999) and The Cambridge Companion to Christopher Marlowe (2004).
Acknowledgements
Introduction: planting oblivion
1. Embodying oblivion
2. 'Be this sweet Helen's knell, and now forget her': forgetting and desire in All's Well That Ends Well
3. 'If he can remember': spiritual self-forgetting in Doctor Faustus
4. 'My oblivion is a very Antony'
5. Sleep, conscience and fame in The Duchess of Malfi
Coda: 'wrought with things forgotten'
Notes
Index.