abstract: The rise of print book culture in sixteenth-century England had profound effects on understandings of identity that are reflected in the prose, poetry, and drama of the age. Drawing on assemblage and actor-network theory, this dissertation argues that models of identity constructed in relation to books in Renaissance England are neither static nor self-contained, arising instead out of a collaborative engagement with books as physical objects that tap into historically specific cultural discourses. Renaissance representations of book usage blur the boundary between human beings and their books, both as textual carriers and as physical artifacts. The first chapter outlines the relationship between book history and assemblage the...
The dissertation attempts to analyze the ways in which the Other is represented in Renaissance trave...
This thesis explores the essentially composite nature of early modern printed books, and how the mat...
This study examines the ways that printing technology affected the relationship between Renaissance ...
This study presents a novel approach to the history of books and reading by encouraging scholars to ...
Thesis advisor: Mary CraneLiterary Constellations resituates collaboration within the networks of bo...
This dissertation explores the act of reading during the early modern period. Examining both the tex...
This dissertation explores the act of reading during the early modern period. Examining both the tex...
“Circulating Knowledges: Literature and the Idea of the Library in Renaissance England” pairs litera...
"The Status of Reading in Early Modern English Literature" explores the social implications of print...
My dissertation examines the intersection of medieval and Early Modern Arthurian literature, English...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to explore how various kinds o...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to explore how various kinds o...
This dissertation explores how the mythological heroines from Ovid‘s Heroides and Metamorphoses were...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
The dissertation attempts to analyze the ways in which the Other is represented in Renaissance trave...
This thesis explores the essentially composite nature of early modern printed books, and how the mat...
This study examines the ways that printing technology affected the relationship between Renaissance ...
This study presents a novel approach to the history of books and reading by encouraging scholars to ...
Thesis advisor: Mary CraneLiterary Constellations resituates collaboration within the networks of bo...
This dissertation explores the act of reading during the early modern period. Examining both the tex...
This dissertation explores the act of reading during the early modern period. Examining both the tex...
“Circulating Knowledges: Literature and the Idea of the Library in Renaissance England” pairs litera...
"The Status of Reading in Early Modern English Literature" explores the social implications of print...
My dissertation examines the intersection of medieval and Early Modern Arthurian literature, English...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to explore how various kinds o...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to explore how various kinds o...
This dissertation explores how the mythological heroines from Ovid‘s Heroides and Metamorphoses were...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
This dissertation argues that the remarkable persistence of Chaucer\u27s fame in early modern Englan...
The dissertation attempts to analyze the ways in which the Other is represented in Renaissance trave...
This thesis explores the essentially composite nature of early modern printed books, and how the mat...
This study examines the ways that printing technology affected the relationship between Renaissance ...