Court Politics, Culture and Literature in Scotland and England, 1500-1540
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A01=Jon Robinson
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Author_Jon Robinson
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DSB
Civic Humanist
Civic Humanist Ideals
COP=United States
Court Literature
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Dunbar’s Verse
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Fellow Courtiers
Free Tongue
Henrician Court
Henry VIII
Henry VIII's Reign
Henry VII’s Reign
James III
James IV
John Poyntz
King’s Patronage
Language_English
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Performative Pragmatics
Pragmatic Imperatives
Price_€100 and above
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Richard III
softlaunch
Spending Hand
Teleological Ethics
Tudor Court
Vice Versa
Wyatt’s Poem
Wyatt’s Satire
Wyatt’s Verse
Young Man
Product details
- ISBN 9780815388265
- Weight: 530g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 29 Nov 2017
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
- Language: English
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The focus of this study is court literature in early sixteenth-century England and Scotland. The author examines courtly poetry and drama in the context of a complex system of entertainment, education, self-fashioning, dissimulation, propaganda and patronage. He places selected works under close critical scrutiny to explore the symbiotic relationship that existed between court literature and important socio-political, economic and national contexts of the period 1500 to 1540. The first two chapters discuss the pervasive influence of patronage upon court literature through an analysis of the panegyric verse that surrounded the coronation of Henry VIII. The rhetorical strategies adopted by courtiers within their literary works, however, differed, depending on whether the writer was, at the time of writing the verse or drama, excluded or included from the environs of the court. The different, often elaborate rhetorical strategies are, through close readings of selected verse, delineated and discussed in chapter three on David Lyndsay and chapter four on Thomas Wyatt and Thomas Elyot.
Jon Robinson
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