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Common: The Development of Literary Culture in Sixteenth-Century England

Online ISBN:
9780191822568
Print ISBN:
9780198704102
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

Common: The Development of Literary Culture in Sixteenth-Century England

Neil Rhodes
Neil Rhodes
Professor of English Literature and Cultural History, University of St Andrews
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Published online:
24 May 2018
Published in print:
26 April 2018
Online ISBN:
9780191822568
Print ISBN:
9780198704102
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

This book attempts to see the development of literary culture in sixteenth-century England as a whole and to explain the relationship between the Reformation and the literary renaissance of the Elizabethan period. Its central theme is ‘the common’ in its double sense of something shared and something base, and it argues that making common the work of God is at the heart of the English Reformation, just as making common the literature of antiquity and of early modern Europe is at the heart of the English Renaissance. The book addresses the central question of why the Renaissance in England arrived so late in terms of the relationship between humanism and Protestantism and the tensions between democracy and the imagination which persist throughout the century. The first part of the book establishes a social dimension for literary culture in the period by exploring the associations of ‘commonwealth’ and related terms. It then addresses the role of Greek in the period before and during the Reformation in disturbing the old binary of elite Latin and common English. It argues that the Reformation principle of making common is coupled with a hostility towards fiction, which has the effect of closing down the humanist renaissance of the earlier decades. The final part of the book discusses the Elizabethan literary renaissance and deals in turn with poetry, short prose fiction, and the drama written for the common stage. In between, the middle part of the book presents translation as the link between Reformation and Renaissance.

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