Beatrice GrovesThe Destruction of Jerusalem in Early Modern English Literature
Beatrice Groves is Research Lecturer in Renaissance Literature at Trinity College, University of Oxford. She is the author of Texts and Traditions: Religion in Shakespeare 1592-1604 (2007) and has published articles in journals, such as Milton Studies, Shakespeare Survey, Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England and Studies in Philology, and her essay in The Sixteenth Century Journal won the 2013 Sixteenth Century Society's Literature Prize. Her essays have also appeared in edited collections, including Shakespeare and Renaissance Ethics (Cambridge, 2014) and Shakespeare and Early Modern Religion (Cambridge, 2015).
Introduction; Part I. The Destruction of Jerusalem in Early Modern Literary
Culture: 1. From Roman to Jew: Josephus, the Josippon and the destruction
of Jerusalem in early modern culture; 2. Continuity and change: staging
Jerusalem and staging 'the Jew'; 3. Preachers and players: the sack of
Jerusalem from pulpit and stage; Part II. The Destruction of Jerusalem in
Early Modern Texts: 4. Marlowe's Jew of Malta and the destruction of
Jerusalem; 5. The siege of Jerusalem and subversive rhetoric in
Shakespeare's King John; 6. The fall of Jerusalem and the rise of a
metropolis: Nashe's Christ's tears over Jerusalem, Dekker's plague
pamphlets and maternal cannibalism in early modern London; 7. The New
Jerusalem: Josephan portents and Milton's Paradise Lost; Conclusion;
Bibliography; Index.