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LEADER 00000cam  2200697Ii 4500 
001    ocn653082382 
003    OCoLC 
005    20200320023659.0 
008    110503s2011    enkab    b    001 0 eng   
010      2010284734 
015    GBB092010|2bnb 
016 7  015618027|2Uk 
019    610867428|a721870623|a800041261 
020    9780199218608 
020    0199218609 
020    9780198715573 
020    0198715579 
035    (OCoLC)653082382|z(OCoLC)610867428|z(OCoLC)721870623
       |z(OCoLC)800041261 
040    UKM|beng|erda|cDLC|dUKM|dYDXCP|dERASA|dUV0|dVPI|dFDA
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       |dOCLCA|dTCJ|dCNMTR|dOCLCA|dCNCLB 
042    lccopycat 
049    CKEA 
050 00 PR2248|b.O94 2011 
082 04 821.3|222 
245 04 The Oxford handbook of John Donne /|cedited by Jeanne 
       Shami, Dennis Flynn, and M. Thomas Hester. 
264  1 Oxford ;|aNew York :|bOxford University Press,|c2011. 
300    xxxv, 845 pages :|billustrations, maps ;|c26 cm 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    unmediated|bn|2rdamedia 
338    volume|bnc|2rdacarrier 
490 1  Oxford handbooks 
504    Includes bibliographical references (pages 756-812) and 
       indexes. 
505 00 |tGeneral introduction /|rJeanne Shami, M. Thomas Hester, 
       and Dennis Flynn --|tIntroduction /|rJeanne Shami --|tThe 
       composition and dissemination of Donne's writings /|rGary 
       A. Stringer --|tJohn Donne's seventeenth-century readers /
       |rErnest W. Sullivan --|tArchival research /|rLara M. 
       Crowley --|tEditing Donne's poetry :|tfrom John Marriot to
       the Donne Variorum /|rGary A. Stringer --|tEditing Donne's
       poetry :|tthe Donne Variorum and beyond /|rRichard Todd --
       |tModern scholarly editions of the prose of John Donne /
       |rErnest W. Sullivan --|tResearch tools and their pitfalls
       for Donne studies /|rDonald R. Dickson --|tCollaboration 
       and the international scholarly community /|rHugh 
       Adlington --|tIntroduction /|rHeather Dubrow and M. Thomas
       Hester --|tThe epigram /|rM. Thomas Hester --|tThe formal 
       verse satire /|rGregory Kneidel --|tThe elegy /|rR.V. 
       Young --|tThe paradox /|rMichael W. Price --|tThe paradox 
       :|tBiathanatos /|rErnest W. Sullivan --|tMenippean Donne /
       |rAnne Lake Prescott --|tThe love lyric /|rDayton Haskin -
       -|tThe verse letter /|rMargaret Maurer --|tThe religious 
       sonnet /|rR.V. Young --|tLiturgical poetry /|rKirsten 
       Stirling --|tThe problem /|rMichael W. Price --|tThe 
       controversial treatise /|rGraham Roebuck --|tThe essay /
       |rJeffrey Johnson --|tThe anniversary poem /|rGraham 
       Roebuck --|tThe epicede and obsequy /|rClaude J. Summers -
       -|tThe epithalamion /|rCamille Wells Slights --|tThe 
       devotion /|rKate Narveson --|tThe sermon /|rJeanne Shami -
       -|tThe prose letter /|rMargaret Maurer --|tIntroduction /
       |rDennis Flynn and Jeanne Shami --|tThe English 
       Reformation in the mid-Elizabethan period /|rPatrick 
       Collinson --|tDonne's family background, birth, and early 
       years /|rDennis Flynn --|tEducation as a courtier /
       |rAlexandra Gajda --|tDonne's education /|rDennis Flynn --
       |tDonne's military career /|rAlbert C. Labriola --|tThe 
       Earl of Essex and English expeditionary forces /|rPaul 
       E.J. Hammer --|tDonne and Egerton :|tthe court and 
       courtship /|rSteven W. May --|tDonne and late Elizabethan 
       court politics /|rAndrew Gordon --|tDonne's wedding and 
       the Pyrford years /|rDennis Flynn --|tNew horizons in the 
       early Jacobean period /|rAnthony Milton --|tThe death of 
       Robert Cecil :|tend of an era /|rJohann Sommerville --
       |tDonne's travels and earliest publications /|rDennis 
       Flynn --|tDonne's decision to take orders /|rJeanne Shami 
       --|tThe rise of the Howards at court /|rAlastair Bellany -
       -|tDonne and court chaplaincy /|rPeter McCullough --|tThe 
       hazards of the Jacobean court /|rKenneth Fincham --
       |tDonne's readership at Lincoln's Inn and the Doncaster 
       embassy /|rEmma Rhatigan --|tInternational politics and 
       Jacobean statecraft /|rMalcolm Smuts --|tDonne :|tthe 
       final period /|rClayton D. Lein --|tDonne, the patriot 
       cause, and war, 1620-1629 /|rSimon Healy --|tThe English 
       nation in 1631 /|rArnold Hunt --|tThe death of Donne /
       |rAlison Shell --|tIntroduction /|rDennis Flynn --|tDonne 
       and apostasy /|rAchsah Guibbory --|tDonne, women, and the 
       spectre of misogyny /|rTheresa M. DiPasquale --|tDonne's 
       absolutism /|rDebora Shuger --|tStyle, wit, prosody in the
       poetry of John Donne /|rAlbert C. Labriola --|tDo Donne's 
       writings express his desperate ambition? /|rHugh Adlington
       --|t"By parting have joyn'd here" :|tthe story of the two 
       (or more) Donnes /|rJudith Scherer Herz --|tDanger and 
       discourse /|rLynne Magnusson. 
520    "The Oxford Handbook of John Donne presents scholars with 
       the history of Donne studies and provides tools to orient 
       scholarship in this field in the twenty-first century and 
       beyond. Though profoundly historical in its orientation, 
       the Handbook is not a summary of existing knowledge but a 
       resource that reveals patterns of literary and historical 
       attention and the new directions that these patterns 
       enable or obstruct. Part I - Research resources in Donne 
       Studies and why they matter - emphasizes the heuristic and
       practical orientation of the Handbook, examining 
       prevailing assumptions and reviewing the specialized 
       scholarly tools available. This section provides a brief 
       evaluation and description of the scholarly strengths, 
       shortcomings, and significance of each resource, focusing 
       on a balanced evaluation of the opportunities and the 
       hazards each offers. Part II - Donne's genres - begins 
       with an introduction that explores the significance and 
       differentiation of the numerous genres in which Donne 
       wrote, including discussion of the problems posed by his 
       overlapping and bending of genres. Essays trace the 
       conventions and histories of the genres concered and study
       the ways in which Donne's works confirm how and why his 
       'fresh invention' illustrates his responses to the 
       literary and non-literary contexts of their composition. 
       Part III - Biographical and historical contexts - creates 
       perspective on what is known about Donne's life; shows how
       his life and writings epitomized and affected important 
       controversial issues of his day; and brings to bear on 
       Donne studies some of the most stimulating and creative 
       ideas developed in recent decades by historians of early 
       modern England. Part IV - Problems of literary 
       interpretation that have been traditionally and generally 
       important in Donne Studies - introduces students and 
       researchers to major critical debates affecting the 
       reception of Donne from the 17th through to the 21st 
       centuries."--Pub. desc. 
600 10 Donne, John,|d1572-1631|xCriticism and interpretation. 
600 17 Donne, John,|d1572-1631.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00038120 
600 17 Donne, John|d1572-1631|2gnd|0(DE-588)118526758 
600 17 Donne, John.|2idsbb 
600 17 Donne, John.|2idszbz 
600 17 Donne, John,|d1572-1631|xanalys och tolkning.|2sao 
655  7 Criticism, interpretation, etc.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01411635 
700 1  Shami, Jeanne,|eeditor. 
700 1  Flynn, Dennis,|eeditor. 
700 1  Hester, M. Thomas,|eeditor. 
830  0 Oxford handbooks. 
994    C0|bCKE 
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