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'Lords of Wine and Oile': Community and Conviviality in the Poetry of Robert Herrick

BuchGebunden
280 Seiten
Englisch
Oxford University Presserschienen am29.09.2011
A long overdue book-length appraisal of the major seventeenth-century poet Robert Herrick. The collection reads his poetry in the context of his literary, musical, political, and religious affiliations and looks at how he both presents and constructs ideals of community through his work.mehr

Produkt

KlappentextA long overdue book-length appraisal of the major seventeenth-century poet Robert Herrick. The collection reads his poetry in the context of his literary, musical, political, and religious affiliations and looks at how he both presents and constructs ideals of community through his work.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-0-19-960477-7
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartGebunden
Erscheinungsjahr2011
Erscheinungsdatum29.09.2011
Seiten280 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
MasseBreite 142 mm, Höhe 216 mm, Dicke 25 mm
Gewicht567 g
Artikel-Nr.12863204

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
PREFACE ; A NOTE ON QUOTATIONS ; LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS ; CONTRIBUTORS ; Introduction: Herrick's Communities of Manuscript and Print ; 1. Why Read Herrick? ; 2. 'Jocond his Muse was': Celebration and Virtuosity in Herrick ; 3. Conviviality Interrupted or, Herrick and Postmodernism ; 4. 'Those Lyrick Feasts, made at the Sun, the Dog, the triple Tunne': Going Clubbing with Ben Jonson ; 5. Herrick and the Order of the Black Riband: Literary Community in Civil War London and the Publication of Hesperides (1648) ; 6. 'Leaves of Fame': Katherine Philips and Robert Herrick's Shared Community ; 7. 'Thou & Ile sing to make these dull Shades merry': Herrick's Charon Dialogues ; 8. Ile bring thee Herrick to Anacreon:' Robert Herrick's Anacreontics and the Politics of Conviviality in Hesperides ; 9. Supping with Ghosts: Imitation and Immortality in Herrick ; 10. 'Touch but thy Lire (my Harrie)':Henry Lawes and the Mirthful Music of Hesperides ; 11. His Noble Numbers ; 12. Afterword:Herrick's Community, the Babylonian Captivity, and the Uses of Historicism ; FURTHER READING ; INDEXmehr

Autor

Ruth Connolly is a lecturer in seventeenth-century literature at the School of English, Newcastle University. She has published on early modern women's writing and on the influence of Herrick's experience of manuscript circulation on the construction of Hesperides. She is currently co-editing Robert Herrick: The Complete Poetry for Oxford University Press.


Tom Cain has recently retired as Professor of Early Modern Literature from the School of English in Newcastle University. He has published widely on Herrick and Donne and edited Poetaster for the Revels series, Sejanus for the Cambridge edition of Jonson's Works, the Poetry of Mildmay Fane for Manchester University Press and is currently co-editing Robert Herrick: The Complete Poetry for Oxford University Press.