The thesis demonstrates the extent to which the sixteenth-century allegorical epic poem, The Faerie Queene, engages with early modern theories of salvation. Much has been written about Spenser’s consideration of theological ideas in Book I and this has prompted scholars to speculate about the poet’s own doctrinal inclinations. However, little has been written about the ways in which the remaining books in the poem also explore Christian ideas of atonement, grace and damnation. This study advances Spenserian scholarship by stressing the soteriological dimension of books II, III, IV and VI. It considers how the poem’s doctrinal ambiguity would have meant that Spenser’s readers would have been able to interpret the poem in terms of the differe...
This thesis traces the development of Arthurian literature through the sixteenth and seventeenth cen...
Concentrating on major figures of women in The Faerie Queene, together with the figures constellated...
This thesis surveys the action and structure of Spenser's The Faerie Queene from the perspective of ...
This thesis will analyse Edmund Spenser's pastoral poems, The Shepherd's Calendar (1579) and Co/in C...
Edmund Spenser’s allegorical poetry “The Faerie Queene” mirrors the author’s observations and perspe...
While sixteenth-century citizens of England and the Continent read, interpreted, and appropriated Th...
This article examines views of the tension between righteous wrath and personal resentment in Elizab...
This analysis attempts to establish that the Faerie Queene is a poem written on the basis of the two...
One of the major claims this study makes is that Spenser desires to teach and cultivate a poetic rea...
Queen Elizabeth I is a figure of immense complexity: a woman who manifested the power of a prince, w...
Approaching the poem from the perspective of reception history, the present dissertation seeks to sh...
The 16th century marked an explosion of interest in “true” accounts of monsters and monstrous births...
In book II of his epic romance The faerie queene (1590), Edmund Spenser narrates the journey of Guyo...
Edmund Spenser's epic The Faerie Queene is considered a brilliant periodrepresentative poem. Whereas...
Recent critics such as Anthea Hume and John King persuasively have placed Spenser's verse within the...
This thesis traces the development of Arthurian literature through the sixteenth and seventeenth cen...
Concentrating on major figures of women in The Faerie Queene, together with the figures constellated...
This thesis surveys the action and structure of Spenser's The Faerie Queene from the perspective of ...
This thesis will analyse Edmund Spenser's pastoral poems, The Shepherd's Calendar (1579) and Co/in C...
Edmund Spenser’s allegorical poetry “The Faerie Queene” mirrors the author’s observations and perspe...
While sixteenth-century citizens of England and the Continent read, interpreted, and appropriated Th...
This article examines views of the tension between righteous wrath and personal resentment in Elizab...
This analysis attempts to establish that the Faerie Queene is a poem written on the basis of the two...
One of the major claims this study makes is that Spenser desires to teach and cultivate a poetic rea...
Queen Elizabeth I is a figure of immense complexity: a woman who manifested the power of a prince, w...
Approaching the poem from the perspective of reception history, the present dissertation seeks to sh...
The 16th century marked an explosion of interest in “true” accounts of monsters and monstrous births...
In book II of his epic romance The faerie queene (1590), Edmund Spenser narrates the journey of Guyo...
Edmund Spenser's epic The Faerie Queene is considered a brilliant periodrepresentative poem. Whereas...
Recent critics such as Anthea Hume and John King persuasively have placed Spenser's verse within the...
This thesis traces the development of Arthurian literature through the sixteenth and seventeenth cen...
Concentrating on major figures of women in The Faerie Queene, together with the figures constellated...
This thesis surveys the action and structure of Spenser's The Faerie Queene from the perspective of ...