That second bottle : essays on John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester
著者
書誌事項
That second bottle : essays on John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester
Manchester University Press , Distributed exclusively in the USA by St. Martin's Press, c2000
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注記
"Papers read at a colloquium held at Wadham College, Oxford, on 2 and 3 April, 1997" -- p. [xiii]
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book focuses on the historical and current place of religion in the Irish education system from the perspective of children's rights and citizenship. It offers a critical analysis of the political, cultural and social forces that have shaped the system, looking at how the denominational model has been adapted to increased religious and cultural diversity in Irish society and showing that recent changes have failed to address persistent discrimination and the absence of respect for freedom of conscience. It relates current debates on the denominational system and the role of the State in education to competing narratives of national identity that reflect nationalist-communitarian or republican political outlooks.
This book will be essential reading for students and researchers in the fields of education policy and Church/State relations in Ireland and will also engage non-academic audiences with an interest or involvement in Irish education. -- .
目次
- "I loath the rabble" - friendship, love, and hate in Rochester, Warren Chernaik
- dissolver of reason - Rochester and the nature of love, Marianne Thormahlen
- Rochester and Falstaff, Howard Erskine-Hill
- Rochester's homoeroticism, Paul Hammond
- love in the ayre -Rochester's songs and their music, Nicholas Fisher
- Lord Rochester's monkey (again), Keith Walker
- the missing foot of "Upon Nothing", and other mysteries of creation, David Quentin
- "Artemiza to Chloe" -Rochester's "female" epistle, Gillian Manning
- Pope, Rochester and Horace, Julian Ferraro
- "A Satire against Reason and Mankind" from page to page, Brean Hamond, Paulina Kewes
- Rochester and the theatre in the satires, David Farley-Hills
- Rochester, "The Man of Mode", and Mrs Barry, Simon Hampton
- was Lucina betrayed at Whitehall? Harold Love
- Rochester's "death-bed repentance", Richard Harries.
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