Eight new essays on topics from Shakespeare and Dryden to Donne, Bronzino, Sidney, Hutchinson, and Milton.
Renaissance Papers collects the best scholarly essays submitted each year to the Southeastern Renaissance Conference. In the 2005 volume, two essays focus on Shakespeare: one on ‘choric juxtaposition’ in his twinned characters and one on the rhetoric of
The Tempest; another essay on drama considers Dryden’s critical response to
Epicoene. There are two essays on John Donne, one on the choir space in his conduct of worship in St. Paul’sand the other on the revisions to his
Elegies. Other essays consider the influence of Castiglione on the paintings of Bronzino, the metaphor of the horse and horsemanship in Sidney’s poetics, and the role of conversation in Hutchinson and Milton.
Contributors: George Walton Williams, Sara Van Den Berg, Jennifer Brady, John N. Wall, Ernest W. Sullivan II, Heather L. Holian, Anne Lake Prescott, and Boyd Berry
M. Thomas Hester is Professor of English, and Christopher Cobb is Assistant Professor of English, both at North Carolina State University.
Table des matières
Bronzino, Castiglione, and a Self-Portrait: Re-evaluating Bronzino’s Trip to Pesaro – Heather L. Sale Holian
Tracing Astrophil’s ‘Coltish Gyres’: Sidney and the Horses of Desire – Anne L. Prescott
Shakespeare’s Twins: Choric Juxtaposition – George Walton Williams
Rhetoric and Intimacy in
The Tempest – Sara Van Den Berg
‘That Holy roome’: John Donne and the Conduct of Worship at St. Paul’s Cathedral – John N. Wall
Conversation in Hutchinson’s
Order and Disorder and Milton’s
Paradise Lost – Boyd M. Berry
Dryden on Epicoene’s ‘Malicious Pleasure’: The Case of the Otters – Jennifer Brady