The Renaissance epic and the oral past

Author(s)

    • Welch, Anthony

Bibliographic Information

The Renaissance epic and the oral past

Anthony Welch

(Yale studies in English)

Yale University Press, c2012

  • : pbk

Other Title

The Renaissance epic & the oral past

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 227-245

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book explores why Renaissance epic poetry clung to fictions of song and oral performance in an age of growing literacy. Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century poets, Anthony Welch argues, came to view their written art as newly distinct from the oral cultures of their ancestors. Welch shows how the period's writers imagined lost civilizations built on speech and song-from Homeric Greece and Celtic Britain to the Americas-and struggled to reconcile this oral inheritance with an early modern culture of the book. Welch's wide-ranging study offers a new perspective on Renaissance Europe's epic literature and its troubled relationship with antiquity.

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