Manuscript Verse Collectors and the Politics of Anti-Courtly Love Poetry
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:21st May '09
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book reappraises the work of early-seventeenth-century collectors of English Renaissance poetry in manuscript. The verse miscellanies, or poetry anthologies, of these collectors have long attracted the attention of literary editors looking for texts by individual, major authors, and they have more recently interested historians for their poems on affairs of state, called verse libels. By contrast, this book investigates the relationships that the compilers of miscellanies established between such presumably literary and political texts. It focuses on two of the most popular, and least printable, literary genres that they collected: libels, and anti-courtly love poetry, a literary mode that the collectors of John Donne's poems played a major role in establishing. They made Donne the most popular poet in manuscripts of the period, and they demonstrated a special affinity for his most erotic or obscene poems, such as 'To his Mistress going to bed' and 'The Anagram'. Donne collectors also exhibited the similarities between these Ovidian love elegies and the sexually explicit or counter-Petrarchan verse of other authors, thereby organizing a literary genre opposed to the conventions of courtly love lyrics. Furthermore, collectors politicized this genre by relating examples of it to libels. In so doing, manuscript verse collectors demonstrated a type of literary and political activity distinct from that of authors, stationers, and readers. Based on a thorough investigation of manuscript verse miscellanies, the book appeals to scholars and students of early modern English literature and history, Donne studies, manuscript studies, and the history of the book.
The new light which he [Eckhardt] sheds on how the material formations of early modern verse manuscripts could participate in edgy comment on sex and politics should open up much further discussion. * Helen Hackett, Times Literary Supplement *
The narrative is clear, concise, and jargon-free * Steven W. May, John Donne Journal *
an exemplary contribution to the history of the early modern book * Alex Davis, Modern Language Review *
this book is evidently the fruit of a careful, passionate, and intelligent analysis of a wide range of material... There is no doubt that its anthology, the comments contained in the four chapters which precede it, and the methodology of this volume, will certainly be of great interest to anyone interested in the circulation of sixteenth and early-seventeenth century literature. * Carlo M. Bajetta, Notes and Queries *
Manuscript Verse Collectors, Joshua Eckhardt's first book, is a pioneering study of English manuscript poetry which uses extensive textual evidence to inform stimulating readings of poetry and politics in the early seventeenth century ... the scholarship here is impressive ... his methodologies should prove indispensible to future researchers in this field. * Daniel Starza Smith, English Studies *
ISBN: 9780199559503
Dimensions: 223mm x 143mm x 23mm
Weight: 521g
318 pages