The Variorum Edition of the Poetry of John Donne, Volume 7.1

The Elegies

John Donne author Gary A Stringer editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Indiana University Press

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

The Variorum Edition of the Poetry of John Donne, Volume 7.1 cover

2001 SCMLA Book Prize winner

Presents an edited text of the author's elegies and a comprehensive variorum commentary. This book is based on a study of known manuscript sources and significant printed editions of his poetry and on an examination of the criticism and scholarship of the previous centuries.

From reviews of previous volumes:

"This variorum edition will be the basis of all future Donne scholarship." —Chronique

"Academic libraries and specialists in Renaissance and 17th-century studies should feel compelled to own each and every volume of this series." —Seventeenth Century News

"An occasion for celebration. Among the most ambitious and valuable collaborative scholarly enterprises at the end of the twentieth century. Superb." —Early Modern Literary
Studies

This latest addition to the Donne variorum, the third to appear in a projected eight-volume series, presents a newly edited critical text of Donne's elegies and a comprehensive variorum commentary. As with previous volumes, Volume 2 is based on a study of all known manuscript sources and significant printed editions of Donne's poetry and on an examination of the criticism and scholarship of the past four centuries.

In the end, the Elegies are experiments in rhetoric, and whilst, for Donne as for Shakespeare, that does not automatically entail insincerity, it refuses to make sincerity the touchstone of excellence. We are seldom reminded as forcefully as by these poems that in the Latin poetry which underlies them the idea of rhetorical figuration is itself imaged as the application of cosmetics. March 2001

* New Criterion *

An occasion for celebration. Among the most ambitious and valuable collaborative scholarly enterprises at the end of the twentieth century. Superb.

* Early Modern Literary Studies *

Academic libraries and specialists in Renaissance and 17th–century studies should feel compelled to own each and every volume of this series.

* Seventeeth Century News *

Like its predecessors, . . . [this] volume of the Donne Variorum enterprise to appear is a triumph in every way.

* John Donne Journal *

. . . This edition immediately displaces all its predecessors, and will be indispensable for scholars and libraries.

* TLS *

In this third volume in a projected eight-volume series, Stringer presents the most authoritative texts and fullest editorial history of the elegies, including textual apparatus from all known manuscripts and editions from the 17th century onward, and also a comprehensive summary of scholarly and critical commentary on the elegies (also from Donne's era onward). The remarkable insights in the textual/editorial component include identification of the most authoritative manuscript for the elegies (housed in the New York Public Library) and a persuasive speculation that the first 12 elegies in this manuscript reflect Donne's intended sequence. Critical insights reveal the early trend not to treat the elegies as a separate group but to integrate them into a discussion of Donne's amatory verse; the value of using the elegies as context for Donne's later amatory verse, notably Songs and Sonnets; moralistic and biographical readings, which sometimes characterize Donne as a libertine and denounce him for licentiousness; Donne as the first poet to write love elegies in English; the coteries for which the elegies were written and the scribal culture that copied and recopied them for presentation to such audiences of intellectuals. The volume contains five indexes and the most comprehensive bibliography on the elegies now available. Indispensable for large collections supporting 17th–century literature.February 2001

-- A. C. Labriola * Duquesne Universi

ISBN: 9780253333766

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 1819g

1152 pages