ABSTRACT Medieval xenophobia fostered attitudes that viewed anything foreign or distasteful as monstrous. Accordingly, insular inhabitants of the Middle Ages were constantly striving to distinguish Self from Other. My dissertation argues that sixteenth-century England began to reverse this trend: it began to reconcile difference, not by distinguishing Self from Other, but by blurring those distinctions. Visions of ancient Self and contemporary Other began to fuse as proponents of Imperial Britain sought to assimilate foreign monsters that were once considered barbaric, inferior, or inhuman. This method of assimilation is especially apparent during the Elizabethan Age of conquest in the New World. England's prophetic destiny was ...
This dissertation is a diachronic study of when and how the first five Plantagenet kings of England ...
Translatio studii et imperii stood as the governing metaphor and principal method of medieval author...
This dissertation challenges the traditional notions of the Anglo-Normans as rapacious colonizers of...
This article responds to recent studies that have applied to early modern English literature the aim...
This dissertation studies the use of the Arthurian myth from the fifteenth through early seventeenth...
In presenting a mythical establishment of British and English nationhood that is one of the most pop...
Throughout the Renaissance in England are works that glorify the nation under a strong nationalistic...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. May 2009. Major: English. Advisor: Dr. John Watkins. 1 c...
The Tudor dynasty of Early Modern England has long-fascinated historians. They collectively represen...
My dissertation, "Marvelous Generations: Lancastrian Genealogies and Translation in Late Medieval an...
If the Elizabethan age was the period during which the European Renaissance came to England by means...
Shakespeare, interpreting late medieval English history from the ages of Geoffrey and Thomas Chaucer...
I argue that plays set in ancient Britain helped shape early modern concepts of anachronism and hist...
This thesis traces the development of Arthurian literature through the sixteenth and seventeenth cen...
This dissertation examines the ideological role and adaptation of the mythical British past (derived...
This dissertation is a diachronic study of when and how the first five Plantagenet kings of England ...
Translatio studii et imperii stood as the governing metaphor and principal method of medieval author...
This dissertation challenges the traditional notions of the Anglo-Normans as rapacious colonizers of...
This article responds to recent studies that have applied to early modern English literature the aim...
This dissertation studies the use of the Arthurian myth from the fifteenth through early seventeenth...
In presenting a mythical establishment of British and English nationhood that is one of the most pop...
Throughout the Renaissance in England are works that glorify the nation under a strong nationalistic...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. May 2009. Major: English. Advisor: Dr. John Watkins. 1 c...
The Tudor dynasty of Early Modern England has long-fascinated historians. They collectively represen...
My dissertation, "Marvelous Generations: Lancastrian Genealogies and Translation in Late Medieval an...
If the Elizabethan age was the period during which the European Renaissance came to England by means...
Shakespeare, interpreting late medieval English history from the ages of Geoffrey and Thomas Chaucer...
I argue that plays set in ancient Britain helped shape early modern concepts of anachronism and hist...
This thesis traces the development of Arthurian literature through the sixteenth and seventeenth cen...
This dissertation examines the ideological role and adaptation of the mythical British past (derived...
This dissertation is a diachronic study of when and how the first five Plantagenet kings of England ...
Translatio studii et imperii stood as the governing metaphor and principal method of medieval author...
This dissertation challenges the traditional notions of the Anglo-Normans as rapacious colonizers of...