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Petrarchan Love and the English Renaissance

Gordon Braden author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:17th Nov '22

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Petrarchan Love and the English Renaissance cover

This book surveys English love poetry, primarily, though not exclusively, sonnets and sonnet sequences that show the influence of Petrarch, from the early sixteenth century to the publication of Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus in 1621. It incorporates a range of new scholarship and thinking into narrative history, with a focus on particular poets including Thomas Wyatt, George Gascoigne, Philip Sidney, Fulke Greville, Samuel Daniel, Wroth, Walter Ralegh, and Shakespeare, as well as particularly notable poems such as "They flee from me", "Gascoigne's Woodmanship", and "The Ocean's Love to Cynthia". The self-absorption of Petrarchan lyricism is brought into a more populous environment and is linked to the ambitious and intense world of the English court, within which many of these poets lived and worked. During the reign of Queen Elizabeth, the Petrarchan theme of love for a powerful but distant woman was literalized in the politics of the realm, in ways that the queen herself recognized and exploited. A final chapter offers a new model for the implied narrative of Shakespeare's sonnets.

There is much to admire in this book, and much to be grateful for; future studies of English Petrarchism can only gain from this milestone. * Alessandra Petrina, Translation and Literature *

ISBN: 9780192858368

Dimensions: 240mm x 162mm x 22mm

Weight: 636g

320 pages