The Age of Thomas Nashe Text, Bodies and Trespasses of Authorship in Early Modern England Material Readings in Early Modern Culture Series
Auteurs : Guy-Bray Stephen, Linton Joan Pong
Section 1 Beyond the City: Sex and the city: Nashe, Ovid and the problems of urbanity. This sorrow's heavenly: Christ's Teares and the Jews. Blame-in-praise irony in Lenten Stuffe. Nashe's fish: misogyny, romance, and the ocean in Lenten Stuffe. Section 2 Mediating Bodies: Reproducing paper monsters in Thomas Nashe. Nashe's extemporal vein and his Tarltonizing wit. Gross anatomies: mapping matter and literary form in Thomas Nashe and Andreas Vesalius. Section 3 Trespasses of Authorship: Wit without money in Nashe. Nashe's vain vein: poetic pleasure and the limits of utility. Postscript: Nashe untrimmed: the way we teach him today.
Stephen Guy-Bray is Professor of English at the University of British Columbia, Canada. Joan Pong Linton is Associate Professor of English at Indiana University, USA. Steve Mentz is Professor of English at St. John's University, USA.
Date de parution : 11-2013
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 12-2019
15.6x23.4 cm
Thème de The Age of Thomas Nashe :
Mots-clés :
Young Men; King Edward III; Book III; Textual Vignette; Lenten Stuff; Nashe's Work; Nashe’s Style; Pierce Penilesse; Pierce Penniless; Unfortunate Traveller; Nashe’s Text; Nashe’s Prose; Christs Teares; Greene’s Menaphon; Nashe’s Career; Martin Marprelate; anti-Martinist Pamphlet; Early Modern Literary Studies; Nashe's Writing; Elizabethan Literary Culture; Greene’s Groatsworth; Extemporal Vein; Mock Encomium; Monstrous Births; Great Yarmouth