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Online publication date:
September 2012
Print publication year:
2003
Online ISBN:
9781846150944

Book description

This book considers the professional contribution of John Donne to an emerging homiletic public sphere in the last years of the Jacobean English Church (1621-25), arguing that his sermons embody the conflicts, tensions, and pressures on public religious discourse in this period; while they are in no way 'typical' of any particular preaching agenda or style, they articulate these crises in their most complex forms and expose fault lines in the late Jacobean Church. The study is framed by Donne's two most pointed contributions to the public sphere: his sermon defending James I's Directions to Preachers and his first sermon preached before Charles I in 1625. These two sermons emerge from the crises of controversy, censorship, and identity that converged in the late Jacobean period, and mark Donne's clearest professional interventions in the public debate about the nature and direction of the Church of England. In them, Donne interrogates the boundaries of the public sphere and of his conformity to the institutions, authorities, and traditions governing public debate in that sphere, modelling for his audience an actively engaged conformist identity. Professor JEANNE SHAMI teaches in the Department of English at the University of Regina.

Reviews

A painstaking and highly nuanced account of [Donne's] religious and political evolution during the period in question.[...] Clearly written, well organised, thoroughly documented in both primary and secondary sources, beautifully indexed, and handsomely produced.[...] This very fine series.'

Source: Sixteenth Century Journal

A major achievement in Donne studies. [...] The scholarship is impeccable.'

Source: Studies in English Literature

Exhaustively researched, intelligently arranged, and cogently argued.'

Source: Renaissance Quarterly

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