9780230001763
 
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The Renaissance
A Sourcebook
 
 
Palgrave Macmillan
 
 
 
18 May 2009
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£55.00
|
Hardback
 In Stock
 
9780230001756
|| 
 
 
18 May 2009
|
£18.99
|
Paperback
 In Stock
 
9780230001763
|| 

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Description

The age of Shakespeare comes to life in this fascinating collection of documents from Renaissance England. As a time of momentous social, economic, and religious transformation, the period is known as the Age of Reformation and the Age of Exploration. Early modern men and women witnessed the onset of print culture, capitalism, empire, individualism, and the scientific revolution.

This substantial anthology provides the vital contextual background for understanding the explosive creativity of the Renaissance. Informed by the latest scholarship and meticulous original research, it includes classic texts and brings archival materials back into circulation. Supported by a wide range of pedagogically designed tools to help students find their way into this fascinating era, The Renaissance: A Sourcebook includes:

• an authoritative introduction outlining historical events, religious revolution, social mobility, technological advances, global exchange, and the literary and cultural ideas that defined 'the Renaissance'
• informative headnotes, footnotes, and section introductions providing important contexts for each individual document
• a timeline and a chronological list of the major literary events of the period
• a guide to further reading in both early modern sources and contemporary scholarship, as well as suggestions for useful websites

The Renaissance: A Sourcebook makes available documents that are both important in their own right and crucial for an understanding of the literary output of the period. The rich source material and essential context that the book provides make it an invaluable resource for all students of Shakespeare, the English Renaissance, and Early Modern Literature.


Reviews

'Professor Orlin possesses an enviable intellectual sharpness and breadth, an understanding of her audience, and a scholarly acumen. The book covers everything a reader could conceivably want to know about early modern England - religion, the family, philosophy, high culture, trade, everyday life and more. I find it impossible to imagine who could fail to learn from this volume.'
Professor Andrew Hadfield, Head of English, University of Sussex


Contents

Introduction
Key Historical Events
Society, Economy and Class
Families, Gender and Sexuality
Religion and Belief
Philosophy and Ideas
High Culture
Everyday Life and Popular Culture
Literary Production and Reception
Trade and Exploration
Science and Medicine
Further Reading


Authors

LENA COWEN ORLIN is Professor of English at Georgetown University, USA, Washington DC, and Executive Director of the Shakespeare Association of America. She is the author of Locating Privacy in Tudor London (2007) and Private Matters and Public Culture in Post- Reformation England (1994), editor of Material London, ca. 1600 (2000), and co-editor of Shakespeare: An Oxford Guide (2003).


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Modernism
 
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