Re-citing Marlowe: Approaches to the DramaAshgate, 2000 - 224 sider Re-citing the available information on Christopher Marlowe, this study seeks to illuminate the preoccupations and pitfalls of previous accounts of the dramatist's canon in an effort to discover, or to elaborate, new areas of investigation. Each chapter considers one of Marlowe's dramatic works in relation to a different critical approach or isue suggested by scholarship's prior treatment of the play. The book consequently operates on two levels: it is a review of a canon which has suffered theoretical neglect; and a blueprint for a more critically sophisticated approach to English literature. |
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Side 35
... printing press to keep its machinery in motion , its spokes well stocked . Ramelli's wheel may be imaged therefore as the inevitable climax in a sequence of events which the printing press initiated ; by increasing book production , the ...
... printing press to keep its machinery in motion , its spokes well stocked . Ramelli's wheel may be imaged therefore as the inevitable climax in a sequence of events which the printing press initiated ; by increasing book production , the ...
Side 36
... printing press therefore return us to the figure of Faustus reading and rereading in his study ; a figure implicated in the myths of early book production by his namesake Johann Fust . Diabolical Books Obscured behind the contradictory ...
... printing press therefore return us to the figure of Faustus reading and rereading in his study ; a figure implicated in the myths of early book production by his namesake Johann Fust . Diabolical Books Obscured behind the contradictory ...
Side 175
... printing press does not detract from humanist literary achievement , but rather complicates it . By imagining the Renaissance artist as creator , craftsman and copyist , the image of the printing - press writer indicates the ...
... printing press does not detract from humanist literary achievement , but rather complicates it . By imagining the Renaissance artist as creator , craftsman and copyist , the image of the printing - press writer indicates the ...
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Words Are What Remain | 1 |
Reading and Writing | 20 |
Underwriting History | 51 |
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A. L. Rowse actually Admiral Coligny Aeneas Aeneas's Aeneid argues artistic audience B-text Bakeless Barabas Barabas's Bevington Calyphas canon Carthage's character Christopher Marlowe claims classical consequently create dead death deconstruction Derrida describes Dido Doctor Faustus drama dramatist edition Edward Edward II Elizabethan English explains father Faustus's Gaveston genre Gill Greenblatt Guise Henry's identity imitation initial inscription interpretation Jew of Malta king king's language literary London maintains Marlovian Marlovian criticism Marlovian scholarship Marlowe's play Massacre at Paris meaning Mephistopheles Mortimer Mortimer's murder narrative nature notes notion original originary paradoxically Pembroke's Men play's plays of Doctor political printing prologue Queene of Carthage reading refuses Renaissance renders repeated repetition reveals scene scholar sequel sexual Shakespeare Simon Shepherd stage Steane stereotype structure Tamburlaine plays textual theatre theatrical theories thou tragedy transformation translation Troy speech ultimately University Press Virgil's words writing