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Reading Memory in Early Modern Literature

Reading Memory in Early Modern Literature

Reading Memory in Early Modern Literature

Andrew Hiscock, University of Wales, Bangor
November 2014
Paperback
9781107463400

    'He who remembers or recollects, thinks' declared Francis Bacon, drawing attention to the absolute centrality of the question of memory in early modern Britain's cultural life. The vigorous debate surrounding the faculty had dated back to Plato at least. However, responding to the powerful influences of an ever-expanding print culture, humanist scholarship, the veneration for the cultural achievements of antiquity, and sweeping political upheaval and religious schism in Europe, succeeding generations of authors from the reign of Henry VIII to that of James I engaged energetically with the spiritual, political and erotic implications of remembering. Treating the works of a host of different writers from the Earl of Surrey, Katharine Parr and John Foxe, to William Shakespeare, Mary Sidney, Ben Jonson and Francis Bacon, this study explores how the question of memory was intimately linked to the politics of faith, identity and intellectual renewal in Tudor and early Stuart Britain.

    • Proposes a new view of how the thriving field of memory studies may be applied specifically to English literature throughout the early modern period and in the context of the European renaissance of learning
    • Encompasses a wide selection of genres including the erotic lyric, the spiritual biography, history writing, translation, prose narrative, the short story and scientific investigation
    • Unusually in the field of early modern literary criticism, the study covers both male and female, courtly and non-courtly, canonical and non-canonical, early Tudor, Elizabethan and early Stuart writers

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Hiscock offers a fascinating account of the nature and uses of individual and cultural memory in the early modern period … he elegantly demonstrates … that remembering, committing to memory and memorialising were notions - and actions - at the very heart of identity formation through the course of the long sixteenth century.' Greg Walker, University of Edinburgh

    'What a splendid book! … a study of memory in early modern English literature which will be of real value to students interested in either or both topics … these individual studies also present a compelling narrative of the ways in which older traditions of memory - and also poetry - gradually give way to newer ideas and idioms, so that the book as a whole provides … clearly focussed literary-critical snapshots of an age in transition.' Mike Pincombe, Newcastle University

    'Although the sweep of this book is vast, the author's findings are sensibly grounded and often quite specific. This through-thread, consistent with the masterful arrangement of the book as a whole, makes it a delight to read.' Renaissance Quarterly

    'Reading Memory [in Early Modern Literature] is exhaustively researched and filled with remarkable insights.' The Review of English Studies

    See more reviews

    Product details

    November 2014
    Paperback
    9781107463400
    334 pages
    230 × 152 × 17 mm
    0.45kg
    5 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: 'the dark backward and abyss of time'
    • 1. 'To seke the place where I my self hadd lost': acts of memory in the poetry of Henry Howard, the Earl of Surrey
    • 2. 'Remembre not (lorde) myne offences': Katherine Parr and the politics of recollection
    • 3. 'Better a few things well pondered, than to trouble the memory with too much': troubling memory and martyr in Foxe's Acts and Monuments
    • 4. Text, recollection and Elizabethan fiction: Gascoigne, Nashe, Deloney
    • 5. The doleful Clorinda? Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke, and the vocation of memory
    • 6. 'Tell me, where all past yeares are': John Donne and the obligations of memory
    • 7. 'Of all the powers of the mind [...] the most delicate and fraile': the poetry of Ben Jonson and the renewal of memory
    • 8. 'This art of memory': Francis Bacon, memory and the discourses of power.
      Author
    • Andrew Hiscock , University of Wales, Bangor

      Andrew Hiscock is Professor of English at Bangor University, Wales. He teaches and publishes widely on early modern literature in British and European contexts. His earlier monographs include Authority and Desire: Crises of Interpretation in Shakespeare and Racine (1996) and The Uses of this World: Thinking Space in Shakespeare, Marlowe, Cary and Jonson (2004). He edited the 2008 Yearbook of English Studies devoted to Tudor literature and his edited critical collection Middleton: Women Beware Women appeared in 2011. He is co-editor of the academic journal English and is about to take up his role as editor (English Literature) of the Modern Language Review and as series editor for the Yearbook of English Studies.