Writing the Nation in Reformation England is a unique study of a neglected period of English writing. It places mid-Tudor literature (1530-1580) within the context of important debates about English nationhood, the nature of the English Reformation and English humanism, the growth of the political nation, and how Renaissance writers constructed authorial identities in manuscript and print.
Writing the Nation in Reformation England is a unique study of a neglected period of English writing. It places mid-Tudor literature (1530-1580) within the context of important debates about English nationhood, the nature of the English Reformation and English humanism, the growth of the political nation, and how Renaissance writers constructed authorial identities in manuscript and print.
Intruduction 1: Andrew Borde: Authorship and Identity in Reformation England 2: John Leland and the Bowels of Antiquity 3: William Thomas and the Riches of the Vulgar Tongue 4: Thomas Smith and the Senate of Letters 5: Thomas Wilson and the Limits of English Rhetoric 6: Workshops of the New Poetry: The 'Shepheardes Calender' and 'Old Arcadia' Bibliography
Intruduction 1: Andrew Borde: Authorship and Identity in Reformation England 2: John Leland and the Bowels of Antiquity 3: William Thomas and the Riches of the Vulgar Tongue 4: Thomas Smith and the Senate of Letters 5: Thomas Wilson and the Limits of English Rhetoric 6: Workshops of the New Poetry: The 'Shepheardes Calender' and 'Old Arcadia' Bibliography
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