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Genre/Form: | Criticism, interpretation, etc |
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Additional Physical Format: | Online version: Renaissance essays for Kitty Scoular Datta. Calcutta ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1995 (OCoLC)605066619 |
Named Person: | William Shakespeare; William Shakespeare; William Shakespeare; Kitty Scoular Datta |
Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Kitty Scoular Datta; Sukanta Chaudhuri |
ISBN: | 019563702X 9780195637021 |
OCLC Number: | 33214689 |
Description: | xii, 287 pages : portrait ; 22 cm |
Contents: | Renaissance habits of reading / Peter Mack -- The rebirth of time : tradition, history and the renaissance mind / Sukanta Chaudhuri -- The battle rages on : the Psychomachia and the Faerie Queene book I / Aparajita Nanda -- The secularizing process in early English drama / Shyamal Kumar Sarkar -- The 'middle' of Marlowe's Faustus / D.K. Lahiri Choudhury -- 'And therefore look you call me Ganymede' / Sailendra Kumar Sen -- Twelfth night and epiphany / Alastair Fowler -- Some uses of topoi in Shakespeare's Coriolanus : an approach to the play / S. Viswanathan -- Hermione's education : from indiscretion to 'better grace' / R.W. Desai -- Prospero's boats : magic, providence and human choice / Helen Cooper -- Jonson's fox / Supriya Chaudhuri -- 'In another country' : forms of strangeness and the strangeness of form in Women beware women / Swapan Chakravorty -- Bacon's 'sensible images' : demystifying the emblem / Bridget Gellert Lyons -- George Herbert : poetic form and the re-formation of man / Shirshendu Chakrabarti -- Change and reform : a note on Milton's Christian doctrine / Amlan Dasgupta -- Milton's 'unoriginal night and chaos wild' / Malabika Sarkar -- The remote saviour : distancing technique in Paradise regained / John Carey. |
Responsibility: | edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri. |
More information: |
Abstract:
This volume brings together new work from three continents on the English and European Renaissance. The subjects include Renaissance approaches to texts and to time; the work of Spenser, Herbert, Bacon and Milton; and, most importantly, Renaissance drama - Marlowe, Jonson and Shakespeare.
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