Writing under Tyranny: English Literature and the Henrician Reformation
2007; Truman State University; Volume: 38; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/20478709
ISSN2326-0726
Autores Tópico(s)Scottish History and National Identity
Resumo1. The Long Divorce of Steel: Tyranny and Political Culture in Henry VIII's England POETRY AND THE CULTURE OF COUNSEL: THE 1532 IWORKES OF GEFFRAY CHAUCER/I AND JOHN HEYWOOD'S IPLAY OF THE WETHER/I 2. A Gift for Henry VIII 3. The Signs of the World: The 'Wondrous' Divisions of the early 1530s 4. Reading Chaucer in 1532 5. Thynne and Tuke's Apocrypha 6. Mocking the Thunder: Henry VIII, Jupiter, and John Heywood's iPlay of the Wether/i 'TO VIRTUE PERSUADED'?: THE PERSISTENT COUNSELS OF SIR THOMAS ELYOT 7. Sir Thomas Elyot and the King's Great Matter 8. iThe Boke Named the Governor/i: Good Kingship and the Royal Supremacy 9. Tyranny and the Conscience of Man: Elyot's Dialogues, 1533-34 10. From Supremacy to Tyranny 11. The Apotheosis of Sir Thomas Elyot THE DEATH OF COUNSEL: SIR THOMAS WYATT AND HENRY HOWARD, EARL OF SURREY 12. Sir Thomas Wyatt: Poetry and Politics 13. Tyranny Condemned: Wyatt's Epistolary Satires 14. Wyatt's Embassy, Treason, and 'The Defence' 15. Pleading With Power: Wyatt's Penitential Psalms 16. 'Wyatt Resteth Here': Henry Howard and the Invention of Resistance 17. Writing under Tyranny: Wyatt, Surrey, and the Reinvention of English Poetry
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