Tudorism

Historical Imagination and the Appropriation of the Sixteenth Century

Marcus Bull editor Tatiana C String editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:22nd Dec '11

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

Tudorism cover

The first in-depth and wide-ranging academic investigation of the reception of the Tudor period in the modern world, this volume includes studies by many of the leading scholars in their fields, and considers the modern appropriation of the Tudors in art, music, architecture, design, religion, public history, social history, film and television, and internet networking sites. A noteworthy scholarly trend in recent decades has been a growing interest in the ways in which societies utilise the past as a cultural resource, as a repertoire of quotable designs and styles, as a vantage point from which to frame political and social critiques, as a source of identities, and as a refuge from present-day anxieties. There has been a great deal of academic interest, for example, in the reception of the ancient world in modern Western culture. Likewise, a growing body of scholarship is devoted to the study of medievalism, the images and ideas that attach to the Middle Ages in the post-medieval imaginary. It is striking that, in stark contrast, very little attention has been paid to the cultural appropriation of the Tudor age, despite the pronounced and enduring popularity of the Tudors within the popular historical consciousness, not only in Britain but also in many other countries. Indeed, the Tudors supply many of the signature icons of Britishness and the British monarchy around the world. This innovative volume will open up a new area of study and set the scholarly agenda for many years to come.

This is an engagin addition to the growing selection of Henry - VII - centric scholarship on offer, and one that should be of interest to Victorianists and popular culture scholars as well as early modernists. * Sixteenth Century Journal *

ISBN: 9780197264942

Dimensions: 242mm x 164mm x 22mm

Weight: 706g

350 pages