John Donne and the Conway Papers

Patronage and Manuscript Circulation in the Early Seventeenth Century

Daniel Starza Smith author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:30th Oct '14

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

John Donne and the Conway Papers cover

Winner of the University English Book Prize for 2016

John Donne and the Conway Papers examines the archive of the Conway family and considers how the archive came to contain a concentration of manuscript poetry by Donne, and what this tells us in terms of seventeenth-century politics, patronage, and culture.How and why did men and women send handwritten poetry, drama, and literary prose to their friends and social superiors in the seventeenth century-and what were the consequences of these communications? Within this culture of manuscript publication, why did John Donne (1572-1631), an author who attempted to limit the circulation of his works, become the most transcribed writer of his age? John Donne and the Conway Papers examines these questions in great detail. Daniel Starza Smith investigates a seventeenth-century archive, the Conway Papers, in order to explain the relationship between Donne and the archive's owners, the Conway family. Drawing on an enormous amount of primary material, he situates Donne's writings within the broader workings of manuscript circulation, from the moment a scribe identified a source text, through the process of transcription and onwards to the social ramifications of this literary circulation. John Donne and the Conway Papers offers the first full-length analysis of three generations of the Conway family between Elizabeth's succession and the end of the Civil War, explaining what the Conway Papers are and how they were amassed, how the archive came to contain a concentration of manuscript poetry by Donne, and what the significance of this fact is, in terms of seventeenth-century politics, patronage, and culture. Answers to these questions cast new light on the early transmission of Donne's verse and prose. Throughout, John Donne and the Conway Papers emphasizes the importance of Donne's closest friends and earliest readers--such as George Garrard, Rowland Woodward, and Sir Henry Goodere--in the dissemination of his poetry. Goodere in particular emerges as a key agent in the early circulation of Donne's verse, and this book offers the first sustained account of his literary activities.

A very valuable addition to Donne scholarship [which] demonstrates the validity of a book-historical methodology that awards the material text pride of place the book is dedicated to a host of minor writers, and so reveals a system of manuscript exchange that is decidedly more true to literary history as it messily shot up from the ground, rather than to a single author-focused literary history carefully pruned of its minor offshoots literary meaning is [in part] enshrined in transmission history, and our editorship and literary criticism relies ever more on the type of intelligent, persistent, and expansive archival research that is so evidently on display here. * Sebastiaan Verweij, Notes and Queries *
Smith follows through this project brilliantly ... Thanks to this painstaking and detailed work, these papers and their archive may now very well be as close as they are ever likely to come to being ... reconstituted to their messiest state * Tom Lockwood, The Seventeenth Century *
... supplies important new information relevant to both established and new initiatives in Renaissance studies ... will greatly facilitate all future work on this important collection. * Steven W. May, Renaissance Quarterly *
John Donne and the Conway Papers will offer new insight into Donne's earliest readers and the poet himself ... a subtle and more comprehensive view of how literary patronage actually worked, from which all those interested in Donne will benefit greatly ... Smith contributes significantly to our understanding of aspects of Donne's life and of his early readers ... [an] important work. * Donald R. Dickson, Review of English Studies *
Offers new insights about the manuscript circulation of Donne's Biathanatos, Problems, and Satyres and several letters in verse and prose along with extensive information about early readers of Donne ... a valuable resource for those interested in manuscript circulation and patronage. * D. Pesta, CHOICE *

  • Winner of Winner of the University English Book Prize for 2016.

ISBN: 9780199679133

Dimensions: 247mm x 163mm x 29mm

Weight: 778g

416 pages