The Oxford History of Classical Reception in English Literature
Volume 2: 1558-1660
Herausgeber: Cheney, Patrick; Hardie, Philip
The Oxford History of Classical Reception in English Literature
Volume 2: 1558-1660
Herausgeber: Cheney, Patrick; Hardie, Philip
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The Oxford History of Classical Reception (OHCREL) is designed to offer a comprehensive investigation of the numerous and diverse ways in which literary texts of the classical world have stimulated responses and refashioning by English writers.
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The Oxford History of Classical Reception (OHCREL) is designed to offer a comprehensive investigation of the numerous and diverse ways in which literary texts of the classical world have stimulated responses and refashioning by English writers.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 808
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1406g
- ISBN-13: 9780198859161
- ISBN-10: 0198859163
- Artikelnr.: 59506983
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 808
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1406g
- ISBN-13: 9780198859161
- ISBN-10: 0198859163
- Artikelnr.: 59506983
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Patrick Cheney is Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Pennsylvania State University. He has been a Visiting Research Fellow at Merton College, University of Oxford, and a recipient of the Faculty Scholar Medal at Pennsylvania State University for research in the humanities. He is General Editor of the Oxford History of Poetry in English, and a Visiting Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. His publications have focused on the reception of classical ideas of authorship. Philip Hardie is a Senior Research Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and Honorary Professor of Latin at the University of Cambridge. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and was Corpus Christi Professor of the Latin Language and Literature at the University of Oxford (2002-6). He holds an honorary doctorate from the University of Thessaloniki, and was the recipient of the Premio Internazionale Virgilio (Mantova) in 2012. He has published extensively both on ancient Latin literature and on its reception.
* List of Contributors
* 1: Patrick Cheney and Philip Hardie: Introduction
* Part I: Institutions and Contexts
* 2: Peter Mack: The Classics in Humanism, Education, and Scholarship
* 3: Stuart Gillespie: The Availability of the Classics: Readers,
Writers, Translation, Performance
* 4: Peter Mack: Classical Rhetoric in English
* 5: Gavin Alexander: The Classics in Literary Criticism
* 6: Mark Vessey: Classics and Christianity
* 7: Jane Stevenson: Women Writers and the Classics
* 8: Cultural Contexts
* a) Politics and Nationalism
* b) Sexuality and Desire
* c) Literary Careers
* d) Fame and Immortality
* Part II: Genres
* 9: Helen Cooper: Pastoral and Georgic
* 10: Philip Hardie: Epic Poetry
* 11: Lynn Enterline: Elizabethan Minor Epic
* 12: William Fitzgerald: The Epistolary Tradition
* 13: Helen Moore: Prose Romance
* 14: Roland Greene: Elegy, Hymn, Epithalamium, Ode: Some Renaissance
Reinterpretations
* 15: Susanna Braund: Complaint, Epigram, and Satire
* 16: Gordone Braden: Tragedy
* 17: Bruce Smith: Comedy
* 18: Tanya Pollard: Tragicomedy
* 19: Bart Vanes: Historiography and Biography
* 20: Reid Barbour and Claire Preston: Discursive and Speculative
Writing
* Part III: Authors
* 21: Jessica Wolfe: Homer
* 22: Elizabeth Jane Bellamy: Plato
* 23: Maggie Kilgour: Virgil and Ovid
* 24: Victoria Moul (with a contribution by Charles Martindale): Horace
* 25: Richard McCabe: Spenser
* 26: Charles Martindale: Marlowe
* 27: Colin Burrow: Shakespeare
* 28: Sean Keilen: Jonson
* 29: Thomas Luxon: Early Milton
* Classical Reception in English Literature, 1558-1660: An Annotated
Bibliography
* Index
* 1: Patrick Cheney and Philip Hardie: Introduction
* Part I: Institutions and Contexts
* 2: Peter Mack: The Classics in Humanism, Education, and Scholarship
* 3: Stuart Gillespie: The Availability of the Classics: Readers,
Writers, Translation, Performance
* 4: Peter Mack: Classical Rhetoric in English
* 5: Gavin Alexander: The Classics in Literary Criticism
* 6: Mark Vessey: Classics and Christianity
* 7: Jane Stevenson: Women Writers and the Classics
* 8: Cultural Contexts
* a) Politics and Nationalism
* b) Sexuality and Desire
* c) Literary Careers
* d) Fame and Immortality
* Part II: Genres
* 9: Helen Cooper: Pastoral and Georgic
* 10: Philip Hardie: Epic Poetry
* 11: Lynn Enterline: Elizabethan Minor Epic
* 12: William Fitzgerald: The Epistolary Tradition
* 13: Helen Moore: Prose Romance
* 14: Roland Greene: Elegy, Hymn, Epithalamium, Ode: Some Renaissance
Reinterpretations
* 15: Susanna Braund: Complaint, Epigram, and Satire
* 16: Gordone Braden: Tragedy
* 17: Bruce Smith: Comedy
* 18: Tanya Pollard: Tragicomedy
* 19: Bart Vanes: Historiography and Biography
* 20: Reid Barbour and Claire Preston: Discursive and Speculative
Writing
* Part III: Authors
* 21: Jessica Wolfe: Homer
* 22: Elizabeth Jane Bellamy: Plato
* 23: Maggie Kilgour: Virgil and Ovid
* 24: Victoria Moul (with a contribution by Charles Martindale): Horace
* 25: Richard McCabe: Spenser
* 26: Charles Martindale: Marlowe
* 27: Colin Burrow: Shakespeare
* 28: Sean Keilen: Jonson
* 29: Thomas Luxon: Early Milton
* Classical Reception in English Literature, 1558-1660: An Annotated
Bibliography
* Index
* List of Contributors
* 1: Patrick Cheney and Philip Hardie: Introduction
* Part I: Institutions and Contexts
* 2: Peter Mack: The Classics in Humanism, Education, and Scholarship
* 3: Stuart Gillespie: The Availability of the Classics: Readers,
Writers, Translation, Performance
* 4: Peter Mack: Classical Rhetoric in English
* 5: Gavin Alexander: The Classics in Literary Criticism
* 6: Mark Vessey: Classics and Christianity
* 7: Jane Stevenson: Women Writers and the Classics
* 8: Cultural Contexts
* a) Politics and Nationalism
* b) Sexuality and Desire
* c) Literary Careers
* d) Fame and Immortality
* Part II: Genres
* 9: Helen Cooper: Pastoral and Georgic
* 10: Philip Hardie: Epic Poetry
* 11: Lynn Enterline: Elizabethan Minor Epic
* 12: William Fitzgerald: The Epistolary Tradition
* 13: Helen Moore: Prose Romance
* 14: Roland Greene: Elegy, Hymn, Epithalamium, Ode: Some Renaissance
Reinterpretations
* 15: Susanna Braund: Complaint, Epigram, and Satire
* 16: Gordone Braden: Tragedy
* 17: Bruce Smith: Comedy
* 18: Tanya Pollard: Tragicomedy
* 19: Bart Vanes: Historiography and Biography
* 20: Reid Barbour and Claire Preston: Discursive and Speculative
Writing
* Part III: Authors
* 21: Jessica Wolfe: Homer
* 22: Elizabeth Jane Bellamy: Plato
* 23: Maggie Kilgour: Virgil and Ovid
* 24: Victoria Moul (with a contribution by Charles Martindale): Horace
* 25: Richard McCabe: Spenser
* 26: Charles Martindale: Marlowe
* 27: Colin Burrow: Shakespeare
* 28: Sean Keilen: Jonson
* 29: Thomas Luxon: Early Milton
* Classical Reception in English Literature, 1558-1660: An Annotated
Bibliography
* Index
* 1: Patrick Cheney and Philip Hardie: Introduction
* Part I: Institutions and Contexts
* 2: Peter Mack: The Classics in Humanism, Education, and Scholarship
* 3: Stuart Gillespie: The Availability of the Classics: Readers,
Writers, Translation, Performance
* 4: Peter Mack: Classical Rhetoric in English
* 5: Gavin Alexander: The Classics in Literary Criticism
* 6: Mark Vessey: Classics and Christianity
* 7: Jane Stevenson: Women Writers and the Classics
* 8: Cultural Contexts
* a) Politics and Nationalism
* b) Sexuality and Desire
* c) Literary Careers
* d) Fame and Immortality
* Part II: Genres
* 9: Helen Cooper: Pastoral and Georgic
* 10: Philip Hardie: Epic Poetry
* 11: Lynn Enterline: Elizabethan Minor Epic
* 12: William Fitzgerald: The Epistolary Tradition
* 13: Helen Moore: Prose Romance
* 14: Roland Greene: Elegy, Hymn, Epithalamium, Ode: Some Renaissance
Reinterpretations
* 15: Susanna Braund: Complaint, Epigram, and Satire
* 16: Gordone Braden: Tragedy
* 17: Bruce Smith: Comedy
* 18: Tanya Pollard: Tragicomedy
* 19: Bart Vanes: Historiography and Biography
* 20: Reid Barbour and Claire Preston: Discursive and Speculative
Writing
* Part III: Authors
* 21: Jessica Wolfe: Homer
* 22: Elizabeth Jane Bellamy: Plato
* 23: Maggie Kilgour: Virgil and Ovid
* 24: Victoria Moul (with a contribution by Charles Martindale): Horace
* 25: Richard McCabe: Spenser
* 26: Charles Martindale: Marlowe
* 27: Colin Burrow: Shakespeare
* 28: Sean Keilen: Jonson
* 29: Thomas Luxon: Early Milton
* Classical Reception in English Literature, 1558-1660: An Annotated
Bibliography
* Index