Approaching the poem from the perspective of reception history, the present dissertation seeks to show that the Bible’s role in The Faerie Queene is far more pervasive than has usually been recognized. Rather than see the biblical material as the domain of only certain sections—notably, Book I and perhaps Books II and V—I propose that it is to be seen as a meaningful presence throughout the poem. Indeed, I will argue that it provides a previously unnoticed, unifying structure to the whole. I begin by giving a brief sketch of the Bible in Spenser’s early life. From here, I draw upon the resources of modern biblical scholarship—specifically, Childs’ “canonical approach”—to describe the way Spenser read the Bible and, consequently, the ways ...
Editor\u27s Note: Dr. De Smith presented this paper at the Prodigal Love of God Conference (celebrat...
While sixteenth-century citizens of England and the Continent read, interpreted, and appropriated Th...
It has long been recognised that chastity is a problem in Book III of The Faerie Queene. The problem...
The thesis demonstrates the extent to which the sixteenth-century allegorical epic poem, The Faerie ...
This essay proposes taking a serious poetic and literary-historical interest in the ballad-stanza ‘A...
The Art of The Faerie Queene is the first book centrally focused on the forms and poetic techniques ...
Recent critics such as Anthea Hume and John King persuasively have placed Spenser's verse within the...
In The Fairie Queene, Edmund Spenser writes an Allegory, of darke conceit using complex imagery. H...
This study examines the sixteenth-century English Reformation background of Spenser's Faerie Queene,...
This analysis attempts to establish that the Faerie Queene is a poem written on the basis of the two...
From the dissolution of the monasteries to the English Civil War, the materiality of religious pract...
This dissertation examines Victorian poetic ambition in light of contemporary Biblical criticism, es...
Traditional interpretations of Spenser’s allegory, both moral and historical, have tended to identif...
William Shakespeare’s thirty-nine plays contain numerous biblical references. Of the 151 English Psa...
This thesis considers how Protestants read the Bible, understood the Old and New Testaments, and how...
Editor\u27s Note: Dr. De Smith presented this paper at the Prodigal Love of God Conference (celebrat...
While sixteenth-century citizens of England and the Continent read, interpreted, and appropriated Th...
It has long been recognised that chastity is a problem in Book III of The Faerie Queene. The problem...
The thesis demonstrates the extent to which the sixteenth-century allegorical epic poem, The Faerie ...
This essay proposes taking a serious poetic and literary-historical interest in the ballad-stanza ‘A...
The Art of The Faerie Queene is the first book centrally focused on the forms and poetic techniques ...
Recent critics such as Anthea Hume and John King persuasively have placed Spenser's verse within the...
In The Fairie Queene, Edmund Spenser writes an Allegory, of darke conceit using complex imagery. H...
This study examines the sixteenth-century English Reformation background of Spenser's Faerie Queene,...
This analysis attempts to establish that the Faerie Queene is a poem written on the basis of the two...
From the dissolution of the monasteries to the English Civil War, the materiality of religious pract...
This dissertation examines Victorian poetic ambition in light of contemporary Biblical criticism, es...
Traditional interpretations of Spenser’s allegory, both moral and historical, have tended to identif...
William Shakespeare’s thirty-nine plays contain numerous biblical references. Of the 151 English Psa...
This thesis considers how Protestants read the Bible, understood the Old and New Testaments, and how...
Editor\u27s Note: Dr. De Smith presented this paper at the Prodigal Love of God Conference (celebrat...
While sixteenth-century citizens of England and the Continent read, interpreted, and appropriated Th...
It has long been recognised that chastity is a problem in Book III of The Faerie Queene. The problem...