Humanist and Scholastic Poetics, 1250-1500

Humanist and Scholastic Poetics, 1250-1500
Title Humanist and Scholastic Poetics, 1250-1500 PDF eBook
Author Concetta Carestia Greenfield
Publisher Bucknell University Press
Total Pages 356
Release 1981
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780838719916

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After two introductory chapters on the humanist and scholastic Aristotelian traditions, the author devotes thirteen chapters to the positions taken by various influential participants in the debates on Humanism versus Scholasticism. Included in this close analysis are: Petrarch, Boccaccio, Salutati, Politian, and others.

Humanist Poetics

Humanist Poetics
Title Humanist Poetics PDF eBook
Author Arthur F. Kinney
Publisher Univ of Massachusetts Press
Total Pages 560
Release 1986
Genre History
ISBN

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This important contribution to the study of English Renaissance culture redefines the humanist movement, employs humanist rhetoric in new ways, and argues that English fiction in the sixteenth century should be seen as a major genre with its own strategies for the imaginative artist. Arthur F. Kinney argues that the main purpose of Renaissance humanism was the cultivation and perfection of the individual and society by the use of rhetoric?by persuasion. Humanist poetics, then, is the poetics of rhetoric: the attempt to fashion the self or the reader by a fiction that employs rhetoric's means. By tracing classical resources and the intertextuality of major English works from More's Utopia to Lodge's Rosalynde and Nashe's Unfortunate Traveller, Kinney not only locates basic Elizabethan habits of mind but also shows where the roots of the English novel may ultimately lie.

Continental Humanist Poetics

Continental Humanist Poetics
Title Continental Humanist Poetics PDF eBook
Author Arthur F. Kinney
Publisher Univ of Massachusetts Press
Total Pages 398
Release 1989
Genre History
ISBN

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Renaissance Humanism

Renaissance Humanism
Title Renaissance Humanism PDF eBook
Author Ernesto Grassi
Publisher Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (ACMRS)
Total Pages 184
Release 1988
Genre Philosophy
ISBN

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The Gift of Immortality

The Gift of Immortality
Title The Gift of Immortality PDF eBook
Author Stephen Murphy
Publisher Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press
Total Pages 332
Release 1997
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780838636855

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This book considers the boast of literary power to glorify or immortalize, a topos of enormous popularity. Focusing on representative figures of Renaissance humanism and the roots of the topos in antiquity, author Stephen Murphy elaborates a complex myth of poetic power. This myth, constructed with the help of such theorists as Ernst Cassirer, Giambattista Vico, Marcel Mauss, and Theodor Adorno, includes the elements of nostalgia for a primordial epoch of magical effectiveness and social centrality, the ideal of patronage as gift exchange, and the absorption of these extra-literary circumstances into literary convention.

The Case For a Humanistic Poetics

The Case For a Humanistic Poetics
Title The Case For a Humanistic Poetics PDF eBook
Author Daniel R. Schwarz
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 226
Release 1990-06-18
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1349110701

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An attempt to define a humanistic and pluralistic ideology of reading which takes recent theory into account. By the same author as "The Humanistic Heritage: Critical Theories on the English Novel from James through Hillis Miller", and "Reading Joyce's `Ulysses'".

Gathering Force: Early Modern British Literature in Transition, 1557–1623: Volume 1

Gathering Force: Early Modern British Literature in Transition, 1557–1623: Volume 1
Title Gathering Force: Early Modern British Literature in Transition, 1557–1623: Volume 1 PDF eBook
Author Kristen Poole
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 555
Release 2019-01-17
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 110831807X

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During the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, England grew from a marginal to a major European power, established overseas settlements, and negotiated the Protestant Reformation. The population burgeoned and became increasingly urban. England also saw the meteoric rise of commercial theatre in London, the creation of a vigorous market for printed texts, and the emergence of writing as a viable profession. Literacy rates exploded, and an increasingly diverse audience encountered a profusion of new textual forms. Media, and literary culture, transformed on a scale that would not happen again until television and the Internet. The twenty innovative contributions in Gathering Force: Early Modern Literature in Transition, 1557–1623 trace ways that five different genres both spurred and responded to change. Chapters explore different facets of lyric poetry, romance, commercial drama, masques and pageants, and non-narrative prose. Exciting and accessible, this volume illuminates the dynamic relationships among the period's social, political, and literary transformations.