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Literary and visual Ralegh / edited by Christopher M. Armitage.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Manchester SpenserPublisher: Manchester : Manchester University Press, [2013]Copyright date: �2013Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781526111470
  • 1526111470
  • 9781526111463
  • 1526111462
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Erscheint auch als:: Literary and Visual Ralegh.DDC classification:
  • 821.3 23
LOC classification:
  • PR2335
Online resources:
Contents:
Literary and visual Ralegh; Half Title Page; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; List of illustrations; Acknowledgements; Notes on contributors; Introduction: Of letters and the man: Sir Walter Ralegh: Christopher M. Armitage, Thomas Herron, and Julian Lethbridge; 1. Raleigh in ruins, Raleigh on the rocks: Sir Wa'ter's two Books of Mutabilitie and their subject's allegorical presence in select Spenserean narratives and complaints: James Nohrnberg; 2. Spenser and Ralegh: Friendship and Literary Patronage: Wayne Erickson
3. Love's 'emperye': Raleigh's 'Ocean to Scinthia', Spenser's 'Colin Clouts Come Home Againe' and The Faerie Queene IV.vii in colonial context: Thomas Herron4. 'Bellphebes course is now observde no more': Ralegh, Spenser and the literary politics of the Cynthia holograph: Anna Beer; 5. Replying to Raleigh's 'The Nymph's Reply': Allusion, anti-pastoral, and four centuries of pastoral invitations: Hannibal Hamlin; 6. 'Moving on the waters': Metaphor and mental space in Ralegh's History of the World: Michael Booth; 7. Water Ralegh's liquid narrative: The Discoverie of Guiana: Lowell Duckert
8. Ralegh, Harriot, and Anglo-American ethnography: Alden T. Vaughan9. 'Most fond and fruitlesse warre': Ralegh and the call to arms: Andrew Hiscock; 10. Ralegh's 'As You Came from the Holy Land' and the rival virgin queens of late sixteenth-century England: Gary Waller; 11. Patrilineal Ralegh: Judith Owens; 12. Ralegh's image in art: Vivienne Westbrook; 13. Where's Walter? The screen incarnations of Sir Walter Ralegh: Susan Campbell Anderson; Sir Walter Ralegh bibliography (1986-2010): Christopher Mead Armitage; Index
Summary: This collection of essays covers a wide range of topics about Ralegh's diversified career and achievements. The essays shed light on less familiar facets such as Ralegh as a father and his representation in the Arts; others re-examine him as poet, historian, and figure of controversy.
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Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed July 28, 2016).

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Literary and visual Ralegh; Half Title Page; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; List of illustrations; Acknowledgements; Notes on contributors; Introduction: Of letters and the man: Sir Walter Ralegh: Christopher M. Armitage, Thomas Herron, and Julian Lethbridge; 1. Raleigh in ruins, Raleigh on the rocks: Sir Wa'ter's two Books of Mutabilitie and their subject's allegorical presence in select Spenserean narratives and complaints: James Nohrnberg; 2. Spenser and Ralegh: Friendship and Literary Patronage: Wayne Erickson

3. Love's 'emperye': Raleigh's 'Ocean to Scinthia', Spenser's 'Colin Clouts Come Home Againe' and The Faerie Queene IV.vii in colonial context: Thomas Herron4. 'Bellphebes course is now observde no more': Ralegh, Spenser and the literary politics of the Cynthia holograph: Anna Beer; 5. Replying to Raleigh's 'The Nymph's Reply': Allusion, anti-pastoral, and four centuries of pastoral invitations: Hannibal Hamlin; 6. 'Moving on the waters': Metaphor and mental space in Ralegh's History of the World: Michael Booth; 7. Water Ralegh's liquid narrative: The Discoverie of Guiana: Lowell Duckert

8. Ralegh, Harriot, and Anglo-American ethnography: Alden T. Vaughan9. 'Most fond and fruitlesse warre': Ralegh and the call to arms: Andrew Hiscock; 10. Ralegh's 'As You Came from the Holy Land' and the rival virgin queens of late sixteenth-century England: Gary Waller; 11. Patrilineal Ralegh: Judith Owens; 12. Ralegh's image in art: Vivienne Westbrook; 13. Where's Walter? The screen incarnations of Sir Walter Ralegh: Susan Campbell Anderson; Sir Walter Ralegh bibliography (1986-2010): Christopher Mead Armitage; Index

This collection of essays covers a wide range of topics about Ralegh's diversified career and achievements. The essays shed light on less familiar facets such as Ralegh as a father and his representation in the Arts; others re-examine him as poet, historian, and figure of controversy.

In English.

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