I read Sidney’s romance, the New Arcadia, in the light of a particular ethos known as Philippism after the followers of Philip Melanchthon, the Protestant theologian. In doing so, I use a critical paradigm previously only used to discuss Sidney’s Defence of Poesy. Thus, building on the work of Robert E. Stillman, I narrow the gap that critics, such as Gavin Alexander, have often found between Sidney’s theory and literary practice. Like the Philippists, peculiarly open to the ideas of humanist scholarship, Sidney draws his philosophical precepts from an eclectic mix of sources. These various strands of philosophical, political and theological thought are accommodated within the New Arcadia, which conforms to the kind of literature praise...
Sidney’s Defence of Poesy was written at a time when poetry was looked down upon by critics in the ...
Using Philip Sidney's understanding of perfect poesy to examine the poetic worth of More's "Utopia.
In the Defence of Poesy, Philip Sidney refers puzzlingly to Thomas More and Utopia. He praises the “...
I read Sidney's romance, the New Arcadia, in the light of a particular ethos known as Philippism aft...
I read Sidney’s romance, the New Arcadia, in the light of a particular ethos known as Philippism aft...
Throughout the long history of its reception, Sidney's Arcadia has been consistently distinguished f...
Although Sidney revised his original Arcadia he did not change his intentions to present an ideal of...
This dissertation addresses the historical, political, and literary-rhetorical framing of counsel in...
This thesis starts from the point of departure that Sidney's claim in his Defence of Poetry that the...
This study examines the rhetoric of the new Arcadia; that is, it analyses the ways in which Sidney i...
This project examines how four early modern authors—Sir Philip Sidney (d. 1586), William Shakespeare...
Neither in Antiquity nor in the Middle Ages could literary theory settle the debate about the primac...
195 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1986.Although the characters of Th...
This study re-evaluates Sidney's method and purpose for inventing Arcadia, through analyzing his f...
Although much has been written about the historical conditions of the manuscript culture in the Engl...
Sidney’s Defence of Poesy was written at a time when poetry was looked down upon by critics in the ...
Using Philip Sidney's understanding of perfect poesy to examine the poetic worth of More's "Utopia.
In the Defence of Poesy, Philip Sidney refers puzzlingly to Thomas More and Utopia. He praises the “...
I read Sidney's romance, the New Arcadia, in the light of a particular ethos known as Philippism aft...
I read Sidney’s romance, the New Arcadia, in the light of a particular ethos known as Philippism aft...
Throughout the long history of its reception, Sidney's Arcadia has been consistently distinguished f...
Although Sidney revised his original Arcadia he did not change his intentions to present an ideal of...
This dissertation addresses the historical, political, and literary-rhetorical framing of counsel in...
This thesis starts from the point of departure that Sidney's claim in his Defence of Poetry that the...
This study examines the rhetoric of the new Arcadia; that is, it analyses the ways in which Sidney i...
This project examines how four early modern authors—Sir Philip Sidney (d. 1586), William Shakespeare...
Neither in Antiquity nor in the Middle Ages could literary theory settle the debate about the primac...
195 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1986.Although the characters of Th...
This study re-evaluates Sidney's method and purpose for inventing Arcadia, through analyzing his f...
Although much has been written about the historical conditions of the manuscript culture in the Engl...
Sidney’s Defence of Poesy was written at a time when poetry was looked down upon by critics in the ...
Using Philip Sidney's understanding of perfect poesy to examine the poetic worth of More's "Utopia.
In the Defence of Poesy, Philip Sidney refers puzzlingly to Thomas More and Utopia. He praises the “...