England's Elizabeth : an afterlife in fame and fantasy
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Bibliographic Information
England's Elizabeth : an afterlife in fame and fantasy
Oxford University Press, 2002
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
No monarch is more glamorous or more controversial than Elizabeth I. The stories by which successive generations have sought to extol, explain, or excoriate Elizabeth supply a rich index to the cultural history of English nationalism - whether they represent her as Anne Boleyn's suffering orphan or as the implacable nemesis of Mary, Queen of Scots, as learned stateswoman or as frustrated lover, persecuted princess or triumphant warrior queen. This book examines the many afterlives the Virgin Queen has lived in drama, poetry, fiction, painting, propaganda, and the cinema over the four centuries since her death, from the aspiringly epic to the frankly kitsch. Exploring the Elizabeths of Shakespeare and Spenser, of Sophia Lee and Sir Walter Scott, of Bette Davis and of Glenda Jackson, of Shakespeare in Love and Blackadder II, this is a lively, lavishly-illustrated investigation of England's perennial fascination with a queen who is still engaged in a posthumous progress through the collective pysche of her country.
Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Chronology
- Introduction: The Queen is Dead, Long Live the Queen
- 1. Gloriana Revives
- 2. The Private Lives of the Virgin Queen
- 3. Good Queen Bess and Merrie England
- 4. The Faery Queen and Victorian Values
- 5. An Empress and her Adventurers
- 6. Elizabeth Modernized
- Afterword: Virginia in the New World
- Notes
- Index
by "Nielsen BookData"