English Literary Afterlives: Greene, Sidney, Donne and the Evolution of Posthumous Fame
English
By (author): Elisabeth Chaghafi
English Literary Afterlives traces life narratives of early modern authors created for them after their deaths by readers or publishers, who retrospectively tried to make sense of the authors life and works. In a series of case-studies of the reception history of major poets Sidney, Spenser, Donne, Herbert, as well as Robert Greene, the first celebrity author within a generation of their deaths, it shows how those authors were posthumously fashioned and refashioned. It argues that during the early modern period there is a gradual movement towards biographical readings that attempt to find the author in the works, which in turn led to the emergence of written lives that consider poets not in terms of their public lives but in terms of their poetic activity, i.e. the beginnings of literary biography.
Will be of interest to students and scholars of several canonical early modern authors.