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Creator
Date
2015
Location
New York, NY, USA
New York (State)
United States
New York (State)
United States
Media format
Printed text
Extent
x, 196 pages
Language
English
Size
24 cm
Reference IDs
Folger bibliographic ID: 339920
Folger call number: PR113 .H59 2015
Folger holdings ID: 491826
Folger call number: PR113 .H59 2015
Folger holdings ID: 491826
Summary
"Grief and Women Writers in the English Renaissance anatomizes the era's powerful but troubling links between the forgettable dead and the living mourners who are implicated in the same oblivion. Four major women writers from 1570 to 1670 construct these difficult bonds between the spectral dead and the liminal mourner. Mary Sidney Herbert, Countess of Pembroke, reinvents the controversial substitutions of aristocratic funerals. New Protestant ideologies of the sainted dead connect devotional mourning and patronage in Aemelia Lanyer's writing. Mary Wroth's verse enacts a uniquely exalted, imaginative melancholy in which Jacobean subjects dissolve into their mourning artifacts. Among the precarious political mourners of the later half of the period, Katherine Philips's lyric verse plays the shell game of private grief. Forgetting, being forgotten, and being dead are risks that the dead and the living ironically share in these central texts by the English Renaissance's most illustrious women writers"--
Notes
General notes
Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents
Machine generated contents note: 1. Inheriting loss: Mary Sidney Herbert, Countess of Pembroke; 2. The golden chain: Aemelia Lanyer; 3. 'This testament of me': Mary Wroth's melancholic sonnets; 4. 'In every breast her monument': Katherine Philips
Also known as
Extended title: Grief and women writers in the English renaissance / Elizabeth Hodgson, University of British Columbia
Subjects
Related names
author: Hodgson, Elizabeth, 1962-