Women and the English Renaissance: Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620University of Illinois Press, 1986 - 364 sider |
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Side 41
... suggests that the piece might gain pardon if not applause in an age of extravagant opinions and wild conceits ; it is no worse than the paradoxical praises of tyranny , injustice , ugliness , and folly ( here he names Erasmus's The ...
... suggests that the piece might gain pardon if not applause in an age of extravagant opinions and wild conceits ; it is no worse than the paradoxical praises of tyranny , injustice , ugliness , and folly ( here he names Erasmus's The ...
Side 45
... suggests that Go- synhyll , far from being overcome with remorse after writing The School House and repenting with Mulierum Pean , probably worked on the two pieces simultaneously . Whether Gosynhyll read Agrippa in the Latin edition of ...
... suggests that Go- synhyll , far from being overcome with remorse after writing The School House and repenting with Mulierum Pean , probably worked on the two pieces simultaneously . Whether Gosynhyll read Agrippa in the Latin edition of ...
Side 224
... suggests that men felt threatened by individual women , the way in which feminine friendships were sati- rized suggests masculine suspicion of women meeting together . Such satire is particularly prominent during the early Jacobean ...
... suggests that men felt threatened by individual women , the way in which feminine friendships were sati- rized suggests masculine suspicion of women meeting together . Such satire is particularly prominent during the early Jacobean ...
Indhold
Exordium I | 1 |
The Genre | 13 |
The Elizabethan Controversy | 49 |
Copyright | |
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aggressive Agrippa antifeminism antifeminist Antony argues argument Arraignment behavior Book breeches Castiglione character classical Cleopatra contemporary Courtier courtly love CRUZ The University defense of women dialogue disguise drama Duchess Duchess of Malfi effeminacy effeminate Elyot's English Enobarbus Epicoene essay exempla female feminine feminism feminist formal attack formal controversy formal defense genre gossips Gosynhyll Gosynhyll's Haec-Vir hath haue Henry hermaphrodite hic mulier Honest Whore husband Jacobean Joseph Swetnam Lady literary London loue lover Lucrece lust maid male marriage marry masculine misogynist misogyny Mistress mulier Mulierum Pean nature paradox Patient Grissill Petrarchan play praise Queen Renaissance literature SANTA CRUZ satiric scene School House scold sexual Shakespeare shrew shrewishness slander Sowernam Speght stage misogynist stereotype suggests Swetnam the Woman-hater Taming thee Thomas thou tion tradition transvestism transvestite Tuvil University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA virago vpon whore widow wife wives woman womankind write