Archipelagic Identities: Literature and Identity in the Atlantic Archipelago, 1550-1800Philip Schwyzer, Simon Mealor Archipelagic Identities explores the invention and interplay of national, regional and linguistic identities in the literatures of early modern Britain and Ireland. The volume includes innovative work by leading practitioners of British studies, and sheds new light on classic cases such as Edmund Spenser's Irish experience, whilst also introducing less familiar writers and texts, such as Anne Dowriche's The French Historie, William Browne's Britannia Pastorals, William Richards' Wallography, Anne Bradstreet's 'Dialogue between Old England and New', and the works of Gaelic bards and French Huguenot refugees. Foregrounding issues of gender, class and migratory identity which have not previously received significant attention in this field, Archipelagic Identities brings British studies into the mainstream of contemporary literary criticism. |
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Page 34
... Death , and Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene.3 The attribution to the nation of feminine and embodied qualities is thus also profoundly implicated in the poem's exploration of the politics of temporality and the nature of the relations ...
... Death , and Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene.3 The attribution to the nation of feminine and embodied qualities is thus also profoundly implicated in the poem's exploration of the politics of temporality and the nature of the relations ...
Page 43
... death of this eighteen - year - old prince elicited an unprecedented number of commemorative poems , more even than had been produced for either Philip Sidney or Queen Elizabeth ( 1990 , pp . 124–203 , esp . pp . 124–5 ) . For Browne ...
... death of this eighteen - year - old prince elicited an unprecedented number of commemorative poems , more even than had been produced for either Philip Sidney or Queen Elizabeth ( 1990 , pp . 124–203 , esp . pp . 124–5 ) . For Browne ...
Page 179
... Death of Jack Straw , presents a particularly violent example of the impulse towards linguistic and national purity ; the ' signes of a stranger ' propose the curious simultaneous effacement and endorsement of national difference , both ...
... Death of Jack Straw , presents a particularly violent example of the impulse towards linguistic and national purity ; the ' signes of a stranger ' propose the curious simultaneous effacement and endorsement of national difference , both ...
Contents
Insular Fantasies of National | 25 |
Whose Pastorals? William Browne of Tavistock and | 43 |
Politicizing and Gendering | 81 |
Copyright | |
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Andrew Hadfield Anglocentric Anne Anne Bradstreet argues bastard feudal Bellot Book II Song border Bradstreet's poetry Britain Britannia's Pastorals British history Browne Browne's canto century chorography claim colonial contemporary context Coryat critics Crudities cultural debate Defoe denizen dialogue Dowriche Dowriche's Duessa early modern Edinburgh edition Edmund Spenser elegy Elizabeth Elizabethan England English Erondelle essay exile Faerie Queene foreign French Historie Gaelic Galloglasses Gaunt's gender geographical Grévin Helgerson Helmdon Huguenot ibid imagination immigrants Ireland Irish island Isles Jacobite Jacques Grévin James John King land landscape language lines linguistic literary London Lord Maley maps Mary Medway metaphor Mutabilitie narrative national identity native notes Odcombe Oxford panegyric panegyric verses poem poet poetic political Poly-Olbion Prince Protestant reference refugees representation Richards rivers sceptred isle Scotland Scots Scottish Shakespeare Sidney social Spenser Stuart Thames Tudor union Wales Wallography Welsh William Willy Willy Maley woman woman-nation words writing