The Arts of Empire: The Poetics of Colonialism from Raleigh to MiltonUniversity of Delaware Press, 1998 - 275 páginas Focusing on Ireland and the New World -- the two central colonial projects of Elizabethan and Stuart England -- this book explores the emergings of a colonialist consciousness in the writing and political workings of the English Renaissance. The literary production of the period engaged England's settlement of colonies in the New World and its colonial designs in Ireland by offering multiple perspectives in constant collision and negotiation. |
Contenido
9 | |
Introduction | 13 |
1 | 31 |
32 | 32 |
Queens response to his marriage I would not | 44 |
The world to her and both at her blest | 63 |
2 | 64 |
persons to this Kingdome and to the Kingdome of | 78 |
Even though Emilia lives up to what is expected of | 119 |
snow which is neerer to the Orbe of the | 130 |
4 | 142 |
and to drive them from their proper natural and native | 190 |
5 | 194 |
The goodly prospect of some foreign land | 206 |
CONCLUSION | 240 |
Notes | 242 |
cry This our earth is truly English and | 88 |
3 | 104 |
because he was unable to extricate himself from his Calvinistic | 105 |
lem of Labor in Paradise Lost in Subject | 252 |
Works Cited | 261 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Arts of Empire: The Poetics of Colonialism from Raleigh to Milton Walter S. H. Lim Vista de fragmentos - 1998 |
Términos y frases comunes
Aeneid Algonquian ambitions anxieties body Brabantio canto celebration Christian civil colonialist colonists court critique cultural demonic Desdemona desire discourse of colonialism Discoverie of Guiana divine Donne's Edited Edmund Spenser Elizabeth empire England English colonial English Renaissance epic Essays European experience Faerie Queene figure God's gold Iago Iago's identity ideology imperial Indians inscribed Ireland Irenius Irish James John Donne John Milton justice king land linked Literature London Lord Lusíadas Masque Masque of Blackness metaphor Milton monarch Moor motif narrative nation native nature Orlando Furioso Othello Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Pocahontas poem poetic political possession Purchas Puritan reader recognize relation relationship response rhetoric Roman royal Samson Agonistes Satan savage sermon Shakespeare Sir Walter Ralegh social society Solomon Spain Spaniards Spanish Spenser Spenser's View subsequent references symbolic theological tion University Press Venetian Virginia colony Virginias Verger Voyage to Guiana writings
Referencias a este libro
Rhetoric and Wonder in English Travel Writing, 1560-1613 Jonathan P. A. Sell Vista previa limitada - 2006 |
British Identities and English Renaissance Literature David J. Baker,Willy Maley Vista previa limitada - 2002 |