Introduced by a brief examination of the anonymous seventeenth-century miniature painting used on the book's jacket and frontispiece, essays in Resurrecting Elizabeth I in Seventeenth-Century England combine literary and cultural analysis to show how and why images of Elizabeth Tudor appeared so widely in the century after her death and how those images were modified as the century progressed. The volume includes work by Steven W. May (on quotations and misquotations of Elizabeth's own words), Alan R. Young (on the Phoenix Queen and her successor, James I), Georgianna Ziegler (on Elizabeth's goddaughter, Elizabeth of Bohemia), Jonathan Baldo (on forgetting Elizabeth in Henry VIII), Lisa Gim (on Anna Maria van Schurman and Anne Bradstreet's visions of Elizabeth as an exemplary woman), and Kim H. Noling (on John Banks' creation of a maternal genealogy for English Protestantism).
ily interested in positing ethnic and sexual subcultures as productive positions from which to develop and legitimate ... In Shakespeare, Authority, and Sexuality, Sinfield presses the problem of minority reading into a more complex ...
... Elizabeth's Voice in the Seventeenth Century', in E. Hageman (ed.) Resurrecting Elizabeth I in SeventeenthCentury England (Madison: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2007), pp. 48–67. ——. (2007b) 'Queen Elizabeth Prays for the ...
This collection investigates Queen Elizabeth I as an accomplished writer in her own right as well as the subject of authors who celebrated her.
The volume shows how the text is more than a moralistic collection of poems and how it is concerned with the transmission of national history, and the ways in which the past can be distorted, misremembered, misinterpreted, or lost.
Sir Thomas Gresham and Gresham College, 1–12. ––––– (ed.) ... Scharf, George, 'Queen Elizabeth's Procession in a Litter to Celebrate the Marriage of Anne Russell at Blackfriars, June 16, 1600', ArchaeologicalJournal, 23 (1866), 131–44.
... London, 1603. May, Steven W. “ 'TongueTied Our Queen?': Queen Elizabeth's Voice in the Seventeenth Century.” In Resurrecting Elizabeth I in SeventeenthCentury England.Ed. ElizabethH. Hageman andKatherine Conway, 48–67.Madison and ...
Oxford University Press ... but as many studies have demonstrated, theater as an emerging cultural institution did not reside at the center but on the ... Mastering the Revels: The Regulation and Censorship of English Renaissance Drama.
111 Skerpan-Wheeler, 108n9. 112 Both portraits may simply be following a fairly standard format, given the commercial context for this particular art form. Milton was unhappy with his portrait. He played a practical joke on Marshall, ...
See also William M. Hamlin, Montaigne's English Journey: Reading the Essays in Shakespeare's Days (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013). 2. The Great Picture in the Appleby Castle shows books that Lady Anne possessed.
John Manners, fourth earl of Rutland, had already prepared the gift of a cup for Lady Stafford in December 1587, but was told that Mary Ratcliffe 'was worthy to be presented with something', since 'she daily doth good offices for ...