‘A comely gate to so rich and glorious a citie’: The Paratextual Architecture of the Rheims New Testament and the King James Bible
Katrin Ettenhuber
This chapter examines Miles Smith’s King James Bible preface, ‘The Translators to the Reader’, excavating the polemical, hermeneutic, and literary contexts that frame the preface and ...
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“A Curious Sort of Book”: Jack London’s and the Politics of Prison Reform
Susan I. Gatti
A bold, imaginative work, The Star Rover demonstrates Jack London’s inventive approach to the social-protest genre. London mixes in the typical problem-novel ingredients: gritty, realistic ...
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‘A day after doomsday’: Cranmer and the Bible Translations of the 1530s
Susan Wabuda
This chapter explores the inaugural moment for the English Reformation, and for the rendering of the scriptures in English within a national church. In May 1530, Henry VIII began to suggest ...
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‘A Greater Errour in Chronology’: Issues of Dating in Marvell
Martin Dzelzainis
While few of Marvell’s lyrics can be dated with any precision, critics no longer find it ‘comforting to reflect’, as Frank Kermode did in 1952, ‘that the date of “The Garden” is quite ...
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‘A king like other nations’: Political Theory and the Hebrew Republic in the Early Modern Age
Kim Ian Parker
This chapter deals with the largely neglected field of political Hebraism. Biblical citations are ubiquitous in virtually all political discussion in the seventeenth century, yet the ...
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‘A Law in This Matter to Himself’: Contextualizing Milton's Divorce Tracts
Sharon Achinstein
The divorce tracts, which consist of four prose pamphlets published between August 1643 and March 1645, represent a significant and underappreciated development in John Milton's theorizing ...
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‘A Mind of Most Exceptional Energy’: Verse Rhythm in Paradise Lost
John Creaser
The sketch of prosodic theory presented in this article helps to clarify how the blank verse of Paradise Lost is virtually a new beginning and transmits a quite un-Shakespearean energy. ...
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“A Music Numerous as Space”: Cognitive Environment and the House that Lyric Builds
Sharon Lattig
This article examines the concept of cognitive environment in relation to ecocriticism. It discusses Gaston Bachelard’s analysis, in his The Poetics of Space, of historian Jules Michelet’s ...
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‘A Potted Peace/Lily’? Northern Irish Poetry Since the Ceasefires
Miriam Gamble
In the 1990s, ceasefires were adopted in Ireland, followed in 2007 by the institution of devolved government at Stormont. With the Troubles now gone, the country has experienced a dramatic ...
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‘A Sly, Mid-Atlantic Appropriation’: Ireland, the United States, and Transnational Fictions of Spain
Sinéad Moynihan
This chapter seeks to dislodge Irish America as the dominant referent in discussions of Irish transnationalism and investigate a substantial tradition that positions Spain as an important ...
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‘A Thousand Fantasies’: The Lady and the Maske
Ann Baynes Coiro
John Milton put A Maske presented at Ludlow Castle in the middle of his authorial identity when he announced that he was an important writer. A Maske has often been linked with Pleasure ...
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The Abbey and the Idea of a Theatre
Ben Levitas
The Irish national theatre movement developed in the ferment of cultural nationalism at the turn of the century, but it was not at all clear what form a national theatre should take: an ...
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The Abbey Theatre and the Irish State
Lauren Arrington
The aesthetic principles of education and representation that Yeats and Gregory set out at the founding of the Abbey Theatre enabled the directorate to cultivate a relationship with the ...
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Abiezer Coppe and the Ranters
Ariel Hessayon
This article focuses on the Ranters, who have been described as ‘forming the extreme left wing of the sects’, both theologically and politically. Combining a ‘pantheistic mysticism and a ...
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Abolition and Activism: The Present Uses of Literary Criticism
James Dawes
This article examines the relationship between literary critical practice and human rights, and describes the present uses of literary criticism. It analyzes an example of abolitionism and ...
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Accessibility
Jonathan Lazar
Accessibility means flexibility. In terms of format, some people prefer to read a print book or a newspaper, and other people prefer to read their texts digitally and on different types of ...
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Acephalous Authority: Satire in Butler, Marvell, and Dryden
Clement Hawes
This article discusses the satires of Samuel Butler, Andrew Marvell, and John Dryden. All three authors convey a strongly satirical take on the volatile Zeitgeist — its mood of damaged and ...
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Acquiring Wisdom: Teaching Texts and the Lore of the People
Daniel Anlezark
This article examines the acquisition of wisdom through literary text in medieval England. The most famous collections of wisdom in the Middle Ages were found in two Old Testament books ...
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Across Borders
Wendy Griswold
This chapter addresses the rise of international digital media and other forms of globalization. It considers in particular how the advent of digital media have affected the “reading ...
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Acting Real: Cinema, Stage, and the Modernity of Performance in Chinese Silent Film
Jason McGrath
This chapter examines the critical discourse on acting in early Chinese cinema, and particularly the ways in which the contrast of film acting with stage acting exemplified broader ...
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