Catholicism and anti-Catholicism in early modern English texts
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Catholicism and anti-Catholicism in early modern English texts
(Early modern literature in history)
St. Martin's Press , Macmillan, 1999
- : us
- : uk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
"Transferred to digital printing 2001: published by Palgrave, Palgrave is the new global academic imprint of St Martin's Press ..."--T.p. verso (2001)
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Responding to recent historical analyses of Post-Reformation English Catholicism, the essays in this collection by both literary scholars and historians focus on polemical, devotional, political, and literary texts that dramatize the conflicts between context-sensitive Catholic and anti-Catholic discourses in early modern England. They foreground some major literary authors and canonical texts, but also examine non-canonical literature as well as other writings that embody ideological fantasies connecting the political and religious discourses of the time with their literary manifestations.
Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations Notes on Contributors Preface Acknowledgements Alienating Catholics in Early Modern England: Recusant Women, Jesuits, and Ideological Fantasies
- A.F.Marotti Robert Persons and the Writer's Mission
- R.Corthell Parasitic Geographies: Manifesting Catholic Identity in Early Modern England
- J.Yates The Myth of Anti-Catholicism in Early Stuart England
- A. Milton 'Out of her Ashes May a Second Phoenix Rise': James I and the Legacy of Elizabethan Anti-Catholicism
- J. Watkins 'What's in a Name?': A Papist's Perception of Puritanism and Conformity in the Early Seventeenth Century
- M.Questier and S.Healy Multiple Conversion and the Menippean Self: the Case of Richard Carpenter
- A.Shell Milton's Paradise of Fools: Ecclesiastical Satire in Paradise Lost
- J.N.King 'The Wretched Subject the Whole Town Talks of': Representing Elizabeth Cellier (London, 1680)
- F.E.Dolan Index
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