A. N. McLaren\u27s study of political culture in the first part of the reign of Elizabeth is a thoughtful and thoroughly researched study that deals with the connections between ideology and politics, on how concepts of hierarchy, patriarchy, and commonwealth changed in the reign of Elizabeth I. McLaren places her work within a strong historiographical context that particularly follows the scholarship of John Guy and Patrick Collinson while also imposing Anthony Fletcher\u27s lens of gender. McLaren places the debate on queenship within a broad context and argues that it led not only to the 1601 Essex rebellion but eventually to critiques on kings as well and the execution of Charles I in 1649. By the middle of the seventeenth century arg...
Sharon L. Jansen\u27s study of women and popular resistance in the reign of Henry VIII is an importa...
Susan Dwyer Amussen has produced an extremely well-researched and gracefully written study on gender...
Anne Laurence\u27s study of the social history of women in early modem England has much to recommend...
A. N. McLaren\u27s study of political culture in the first part of the reign of Elizabeth is a thoug...
In a clever play on words, Louis Montrose’s important new book on Elizabeth I suggests a study with ...
Mihoko Suzuki carefully puts together class and gender in her study, Subordinate Subjects: Gender, t...
Mary of Guise, widow of James V of Scotland, is a fascinating woman, though one with a very differen...
Phillippa Berry has written a solidly researched and ambitious study of the impact of Elizabeth I an...
Review of The Heart and Stomach of a King: Elizabeth I and the Politics of Sex and Power by Carole L...
Geoffrey Elton's model of Tudor politics, which emphasized the importance of political institutions ...
Part of a special section on the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England. The writer examines the clos...
Review of Scott McMillin and Sally-Beth MacLean, 'The Queen's Men and their plays' (Cambridge: Cambr...
“A Body Politic to Govern: The Political Humanism of Elizabeth I” is a study that examines the influ...
This paper will analyze Elizabeth I’s political style and the effects on it by both religion and inf...
The author of this study is not the first biographer to bring Elizabeth I and Mary Stuart together, ...
Sharon L. Jansen\u27s study of women and popular resistance in the reign of Henry VIII is an importa...
Susan Dwyer Amussen has produced an extremely well-researched and gracefully written study on gender...
Anne Laurence\u27s study of the social history of women in early modem England has much to recommend...
A. N. McLaren\u27s study of political culture in the first part of the reign of Elizabeth is a thoug...
In a clever play on words, Louis Montrose’s important new book on Elizabeth I suggests a study with ...
Mihoko Suzuki carefully puts together class and gender in her study, Subordinate Subjects: Gender, t...
Mary of Guise, widow of James V of Scotland, is a fascinating woman, though one with a very differen...
Phillippa Berry has written a solidly researched and ambitious study of the impact of Elizabeth I an...
Review of The Heart and Stomach of a King: Elizabeth I and the Politics of Sex and Power by Carole L...
Geoffrey Elton's model of Tudor politics, which emphasized the importance of political institutions ...
Part of a special section on the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England. The writer examines the clos...
Review of Scott McMillin and Sally-Beth MacLean, 'The Queen's Men and their plays' (Cambridge: Cambr...
“A Body Politic to Govern: The Political Humanism of Elizabeth I” is a study that examines the influ...
This paper will analyze Elizabeth I’s political style and the effects on it by both religion and inf...
The author of this study is not the first biographer to bring Elizabeth I and Mary Stuart together, ...
Sharon L. Jansen\u27s study of women and popular resistance in the reign of Henry VIII is an importa...
Susan Dwyer Amussen has produced an extremely well-researched and gracefully written study on gender...
Anne Laurence\u27s study of the social history of women in early modem England has much to recommend...