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    Crafting Poetry Anthologies in Renaissance England: Early Modern Cultures of Recreation

    £74.70
    £83.00
    Price-Match is available in-store for recommended titles in CCCU module handbooks
    ISBN: 9781108491099
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    Attribute nameAttribute value
    AuthorO'Callaghan, Michelle (University of Rea
    Pub Date10/12/2020
    BindingHardback
    Pages290
    Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRES
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    This study of how poetry was collected in anthologies in Renaissance England reads canonical authors - Surrey, Spenser, and Sidney - alongside women and non-elite writers. Designed for English literature students, its innovative focus on the crafted book and recreation will also interest students of early modern history, book history, and musicology.

    The printed poetry anthologies first produced in sixteenth-century England have long been understood as instrumental in shaping the history of English poetry. This book offers a fresh approach to this history by turning attention to the recreative properties of these books, both in the sense of making again, of crafting and recrafting, and of poetry as a pleasurable pastime. The model of materiality employed extends from books-as-artefacts to their embodiedness - their crafted, performative, and expressive capacities. Publishers invariably advertised the recreational uses of anthologies, locating these books in early modern performance cultures in which poetry was read, silently and in company, sometimes set to music, and re-crafted into other forms. Engaging with studies of material cultures, including work on craft, households, and soundscapes, Crafting Poetry Anthologies argues for a domestic Renaissance in which anthologies travelled across social classes, shaping recreational cultures that incorporated men and women in literary culture.