textMy dissertation revises our assumptions about the Renaissance commonplace that poetic monuments last longer than marble ones. We tend to understand the commonplace as being about the materiality of artistic media and thus the comparative durability of text and stone. In contrast, I argue that English Renaissance poets and theorists treat the monument of verse as a space where their hopes for the poem’s future converge with broader cultural concerns about the reception of the ancient past and the place of English vernacular poetry within the hierarchy of classical and contemporary European letters. In Renaissance poetics manuals, authors appropriate a newly classicizing architectural vocabulary to communicate confidence in the lasting po...
Calliope was the muse of epic poetry, and this thesis could be described as an epic poem in the sens...
In Lyrical Inheritance, I argue that, conceiving of poetry as productive of reputation and hopeful...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
In the cultural revival of the Renaissance, ruins presented a challenge to the humanists: were they ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of English, 2016.This dissertation reconsiders ...
In Mortal Verse I argue that early modern poets sought a poetic immortality that was paradoxically r...
This dissertation examines how Middle English poets deployed the dream vision genre and the elegiac ...
This essay intends to follow the development of Early Modern architectural language from the "esoter...
Closure is one of the most important putative goals for highly structured Renaissance verse. Element...
This dissertation reads sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English poetry (and, in one chapter, dram...
This project recovers a forgotten history of Renaissance poetry as mail. At a time when trends in En...
This dissertation expands the familiar concept of literary history in order to argue for the histori...
Recently, scholars have argued that poetry provided the foundations for the development of rhetoric ...
My dissertation, “Matter and Form in Medieval English Literature”, investigates the relationship bet...
By examining Renaissance criticism both literary and musical, framed in the context of the contempor...
Calliope was the muse of epic poetry, and this thesis could be described as an epic poem in the sens...
In Lyrical Inheritance, I argue that, conceiving of poetry as productive of reputation and hopeful...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
In the cultural revival of the Renaissance, ruins presented a challenge to the humanists: were they ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of English, 2016.This dissertation reconsiders ...
In Mortal Verse I argue that early modern poets sought a poetic immortality that was paradoxically r...
This dissertation examines how Middle English poets deployed the dream vision genre and the elegiac ...
This essay intends to follow the development of Early Modern architectural language from the "esoter...
Closure is one of the most important putative goals for highly structured Renaissance verse. Element...
This dissertation reads sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English poetry (and, in one chapter, dram...
This project recovers a forgotten history of Renaissance poetry as mail. At a time when trends in En...
This dissertation expands the familiar concept of literary history in order to argue for the histori...
Recently, scholars have argued that poetry provided the foundations for the development of rhetoric ...
My dissertation, “Matter and Form in Medieval English Literature”, investigates the relationship bet...
By examining Renaissance criticism both literary and musical, framed in the context of the contempor...
Calliope was the muse of epic poetry, and this thesis could be described as an epic poem in the sens...
In Lyrical Inheritance, I argue that, conceiving of poetry as productive of reputation and hopeful...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...