English Literary Criticism

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15th century humanism
15th Century Italy
16th Century Readers
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Aeneas Sylvius
Ancient Classical Theory
Ancient Greece
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Compleat Gentleman
critical changes after 1590
Dramatic theory
dramatic theory evolution
Du Bartas
early modern literary criticism history
Early Tudor Period
English humanist scholarship
English literary criticism
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Eternal Law
Good Life
Heinsius
Henry Savile
Heroic Couplet
Italian Humanists
Literary Appreciation
Literary Judgments
Lope De Vega
love sonnets
medieval critical heritage
Medieval tradition
Poetic Art
poetic defence tradition
post-medieval literary criticism
Quintilian's Classification
Quintilian’s Classification
religious poetry
Renaissance humanism
Rhetoric tradition
Rhetorica Ad Herennium
rhetorical studies after 1500
Richard III
Secretary Of State
Sir Henry Savile
Sir John Beaumont
Tudor literary theory
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367763329
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Originally published in 1947, this volume reviews the critical achievement at the Renaissance. It discusses the ideas of literature then current in England, as revealed in contemporary theorizing and judgments. The period has sometimes been dismissed as lacking great critics, and the critical works themselves have been described as elementary and remote, but, as this work shows, viewed in the light of what came before and after, those texts will be found to be of considerable interest and possess intrinsic and historical value. This book charts the course of the movement and the main findings and their significance in critical history. There is an emphasis to show the part payed by the medieval tradition, with its inheritance of post-classical and patristic doctrine; the lead given by 15th Century Italian and other Humanists and the no less important attempts of independent native writers to work out new artistic and dramatic theory of their own.

J. W. H. Atkins was a Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge and Emeritus Professor of English Language and Literature, University of Aberystwyth

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