Bibliographic Information

Thomas Nashe

edited by Georgia Brown

(The university wits / series editor, Robert A. Logan, [v. 6])

Ashgate, c2011

Available at  / 21 libraries

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Note

"... the term 'University Wits' to apply to six, university-trained Renaissance writers: John Lyly (1554-1606), Thomas Lodge (1558-1625), and George Peele (1558-1597), all graduates of Oxford, and Robert Greene (1558-1592), Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593), and Thomas Nashe (1567-1601), Cambridge graduates."--Series pref

Includes bibliographies and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The current surge of interest in the Elizabethan poet, dramatist, prose-writer and critic, Thomas Nashe, follows years of neglect or undisguised hostility. Yet, as early allusions testify, Nashe was a name which imposed itself on contemporary culture. Nashe annoyed and even disturbed his contemporaries, but they certainly paid attention to him because he pioneered new approaches to writing, and indeed to living, and because he was an astute critic. The essays in this volume have been chosen for the skill with which they present diverse approaches to key issues in Nashe. All Nashe's texts are covered, as are his relationships with contemporaries, like Shakespeare. The introduction analyses different approaches, locating them in the history of Nashe criticism, and suggests areas for future research. It argues that Nashe's importance to Renaissance studies lies in his anomalousness, as he forces us to rethink the Renaissance. He makes the Renaissance unfamiliar again, and pushes criticism out of its comfort zone.

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Introduction
  • Part I Nashe and Early Modern Literature: Contexts, Relationships, Influence: The extemporal vein: Thomas Nashe and the invention of modern narrative, Kiernan Ryan
  • 'London' and 'The Wits' Charles Nicholl
  • Shakespearean grotesque: the Falstaff plays, Neil Rhodes
  • The uses of resentment: Nashe, 'Parnassus', and the poet's mystery, Laurie Ellinghausen. Part II Earlier Works: 'The Anatomie of Absurditie': a study in literary apprenticeship, Don Cameron Allen
  • The influence of the Marprelate controversy upon the style of Thomas Nashe, Travis L. Summersgill
  • The miseries of authorship and 'Pierce Penilesse', G.R. Hibbard
  • 'Pierce Penilesse', the bankrupt's carnival, Lorna Hutson
  • 'Christs Teares': Nashe's 'forsaken extremities', Katherine Duncan-Jones
  • Summer fruit and autumn leaves: Thomas Nashe in 1593, Philip Schwyzer
  • Prototypes of festive comedy in a pageant entertainment: 'Summer's Last Will and Testament', C.L. Barber
  • 'Summer's Last Will and Testament': revels' end, Marie Axton. Part III Later Works, Including the Quarrel with Gabriel Harvey: Nashe and the poetics of obscenity: 'The Choise of Valentines', M.L. Stapleton
  • Transmuted into a woman or worse: masculine gender identity and Thomas Nashe's Choice of Valentines, Ian Frederick Moulton
  • 'All this tractate is but a dream': the ethics of dream narration in Thomas Nashe's The Terrors of the Night, Per Sivefors
  • The patrimony of learning, Alexandra Halasz
  • Day labor: Thomas Nashe and the practice of prose in early modern England, Steve Mentz
  • Nashe's red herring: epistemologies of the commodity in Lenten Stuffe, Henry S. Turner
  • Rhetoric and truth, Jonathan V. Crewe. Part IV The Unfortunate Traveller (1594): Thomas Nashe and the functional grotesque in Elizabethan prose fiction, Barbara C. Millard
  • Nashe's 'The Unfortunate Traveller': the 'newes of the maker' game, Margaret Ferguson
  • Inside the outsider, Nashe's 'Unfortunate Traveller' and Bakhtins polyphonic novel, Ann Rosalind Jones
  • The epistemological challenge of Nashe's 'The Unfortunate Traveller', Raymond Stephanson
  • 'The Unfortunate Traveller' in (and out of) France, Richard Hillman
  • How to turn prose into literature: the case of Thomas Nashe, Stephen Guy-Bray
  • Name index.

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