Fr. 150.00

Reading Class Through Shakespeare, Donne, and Milton

English · Hardback

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Description

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"Why study Renaissance literature? Reading Class through Shakespeare, Donne, and Milton examines six canonical Renaissance works to show that reading literature also means reading class. Warley demonstrates that careful reading offers the best way to understand social relations and in doing so he offers a detailed historical argument about what class means in the seventeenth century. Drawing on a wide range of critics, from Erich Auerbach to Jacques Ranciáere, from Cleanth Brooks to Theodor Adorno, from Raymond Williams to Jacques Derrida, the book implicitly defends literary criticism. It reaffirms six Renaissance poems and plays, including poems by Donne, Shakespeare's Hamlet, and Milton's Paradise Lost, as the sophisticated and moving works of art that generations of readers have loved. These accessible interpretations also offer exciting new directions for the roles of art and criticism in the contemporary, post-industrial world"--

List of contents










1. Of the fickle inequality that is between us; 2. The fickle fee-simple; 3. Just Horatio; 4. Ideal Donne; 5. Virtuoso Donne; 6. Uncouth Milton, part one; 7. Uncouth Milton, part two.

About the author

Christopher Warley teaches Renaissance literature, literary criticism and critical theory at the University of Toronto. He is the author of Sonnet Sequences and Social Distinction in Renaissance England (Cambridge, 2005).

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