This dissertation explores humanism, the rediscovery of the culture of ancient Greece and Rome, in late fifteenth- and early sixteenth-century England. It does so with reference to texts, institutional settings, and networks both within and beyond England, and examines the activities of several seemingly minor figures who have been absent from recent scholarship on the topic: John Holt, William Lily, Richard Croke, Leonard Cox, and Thomas Lupset. These figures made distinctive and original contributions to the genres in which they operated, whether the grammatical manual, educational treatise, dialogue, or philosophical meditation. They are also noteworthy for their considerable influence, whether in England or further abroad. With regard...
England may have been physically remote from the acknowledged centres of production of humanist text...
What has fifteenth-century England to do with the Renaissance? By challenging accepted notions of 'm...
This essay deals with the concept of Renaissance, proposing a definition of the term as a meeting po...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
This thesis surveys and interprets the discipline of humanist philology in England in the seventeent...
This thesis surveys and interprets the discipline of humanist philology in England in the seventeent...
Chapter Two addresses Sir Thomas More as a Catholic humanist, who represents English humanism before...
Includes bibliographical references.The studies required by the humanist were, together with the Hol...
England may have been physically remote from the acknowledged centres of production of humanist text...
This dissertation argues that the problem of perfection was central to English literary culture in t...
Table of Contents Introduction: A definition of humanism in early fifteenth-century England This def...
Arguing against current historiography, I contend that humanism remained viable in England throughou...
In the English Renaissance, a new kind of manliness arose in response to an increasingly centralize...
In the English Renaissance, a new kind of manliness arose in response to an increasingly centralize...
Focusing on the work of Marlowe, Shakespeare, Jonson, and Dekker, my dissertation, Peripheral Knowle...
England may have been physically remote from the acknowledged centres of production of humanist text...
What has fifteenth-century England to do with the Renaissance? By challenging accepted notions of 'm...
This essay deals with the concept of Renaissance, proposing a definition of the term as a meeting po...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
This thesis surveys and interprets the discipline of humanist philology in England in the seventeent...
This thesis surveys and interprets the discipline of humanist philology in England in the seventeent...
Chapter Two addresses Sir Thomas More as a Catholic humanist, who represents English humanism before...
Includes bibliographical references.The studies required by the humanist were, together with the Hol...
England may have been physically remote from the acknowledged centres of production of humanist text...
This dissertation argues that the problem of perfection was central to English literary culture in t...
Table of Contents Introduction: A definition of humanism in early fifteenth-century England This def...
Arguing against current historiography, I contend that humanism remained viable in England throughou...
In the English Renaissance, a new kind of manliness arose in response to an increasingly centralize...
In the English Renaissance, a new kind of manliness arose in response to an increasingly centralize...
Focusing on the work of Marlowe, Shakespeare, Jonson, and Dekker, my dissertation, Peripheral Knowle...
England may have been physically remote from the acknowledged centres of production of humanist text...
What has fifteenth-century England to do with the Renaissance? By challenging accepted notions of 'm...
This essay deals with the concept of Renaissance, proposing a definition of the term as a meeting po...