Radical Spenser: Pastoral, Politics and the New Aestheticism
This book provides a radical reading of Edmund Spenser and argues for a re-orientation in Renaissance criticism. It begins by critiquing the new historicist hegemony in Spenser studies, and, through a series of detailed readings, proposes alternative strategies for interpreting the texts of this pivotal Renaissance author which include a politicised ‘new aestheticism’, eco-criticism, and pastoral theory. Unlike most non-new historicist studies, Radical Spenser argues that Spenser’s texts demand a reading at once political and sensitive to aesthetic surprise. Following a polemical Introduction which establishes Spenser’s centrality to key problems in contemporary Renaissance studies, Richard Chamberlain shows that William Empson’s ideas about pastoral are vital for an understanding of Spenser and early modern literature. The following chapters discuss Spenser’s use, in The Shepheardes Calender, of a distinctively ‘pastoral’ logic to problematise the relationship between literature and criticism; the ways in which this method informs The Faerie Queene; the approach, in the central books of the epic, to textual and state authority; and the final books’ exploration of political experience. Finally, by demonstrating the complexity of the critically neglected prose treatise A View of the State of Ireland, the book offers an eco-critical perspective on Spenser’s place in the natural and cultural environments of sixteenth-century Ireland.Key Features* Theoretical intervention encouraging debate and analysis in Renaissance studies.* Close analysis of key passages offers a new understanding of how Spenser’s writing works.* Broad coverage including readings of Spenser’s major poems and his prose dialogue on Ireland.
1136858538
Radical Spenser: Pastoral, Politics and the New Aestheticism
This book provides a radical reading of Edmund Spenser and argues for a re-orientation in Renaissance criticism. It begins by critiquing the new historicist hegemony in Spenser studies, and, through a series of detailed readings, proposes alternative strategies for interpreting the texts of this pivotal Renaissance author which include a politicised ‘new aestheticism’, eco-criticism, and pastoral theory. Unlike most non-new historicist studies, Radical Spenser argues that Spenser’s texts demand a reading at once political and sensitive to aesthetic surprise. Following a polemical Introduction which establishes Spenser’s centrality to key problems in contemporary Renaissance studies, Richard Chamberlain shows that William Empson’s ideas about pastoral are vital for an understanding of Spenser and early modern literature. The following chapters discuss Spenser’s use, in The Shepheardes Calender, of a distinctively ‘pastoral’ logic to problematise the relationship between literature and criticism; the ways in which this method informs The Faerie Queene; the approach, in the central books of the epic, to textual and state authority; and the final books’ exploration of political experience. Finally, by demonstrating the complexity of the critically neglected prose treatise A View of the State of Ireland, the book offers an eco-critical perspective on Spenser’s place in the natural and cultural environments of sixteenth-century Ireland.Key Features* Theoretical intervention encouraging debate and analysis in Renaissance studies.* Close analysis of key passages offers a new understanding of how Spenser’s writing works.* Broad coverage including readings of Spenser’s major poems and his prose dialogue on Ireland.
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Radical Spenser: Pastoral, Politics and the New Aestheticism

Radical Spenser: Pastoral, Politics and the New Aestheticism

by Richard Chamberlain
Radical Spenser: Pastoral, Politics and the New Aestheticism

Radical Spenser: Pastoral, Politics and the New Aestheticism

by Richard Chamberlain

Hardcover

$110.00 
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Overview

This book provides a radical reading of Edmund Spenser and argues for a re-orientation in Renaissance criticism. It begins by critiquing the new historicist hegemony in Spenser studies, and, through a series of detailed readings, proposes alternative strategies for interpreting the texts of this pivotal Renaissance author which include a politicised ‘new aestheticism’, eco-criticism, and pastoral theory. Unlike most non-new historicist studies, Radical Spenser argues that Spenser’s texts demand a reading at once political and sensitive to aesthetic surprise. Following a polemical Introduction which establishes Spenser’s centrality to key problems in contemporary Renaissance studies, Richard Chamberlain shows that William Empson’s ideas about pastoral are vital for an understanding of Spenser and early modern literature. The following chapters discuss Spenser’s use, in The Shepheardes Calender, of a distinctively ‘pastoral’ logic to problematise the relationship between literature and criticism; the ways in which this method informs The Faerie Queene; the approach, in the central books of the epic, to textual and state authority; and the final books’ exploration of political experience. Finally, by demonstrating the complexity of the critically neglected prose treatise A View of the State of Ireland, the book offers an eco-critical perspective on Spenser’s place in the natural and cultural environments of sixteenth-century Ireland.Key Features* Theoretical intervention encouraging debate and analysis in Renaissance studies.* Close analysis of key passages offers a new understanding of how Spenser’s writing works.* Broad coverage including readings of Spenser’s major poems and his prose dialogue on Ireland.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780748621910
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 07/18/2005
Pages: 176
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Richard Chamberlain is Visiting Fellow in the Department of English at the University of Bristol.

Table of Contents

Introduction; I Reading; 1. 'The Essential Trick': Pastoral, New Historicism and the Aesthetic; II. Poetry; 2. Spenser's 'Critic Pen' in The Shepheardes Calender; 3. Ways In: The Pastoral Paratexts of The Faerie Queene; 4. Spenser's mode of Transport: The Faerie Queene, Books II-IV; 5. Political Poetry? The Faerie Queene, Books V-VI; III Environment; 6. Green Spenser: Mutabilitie and Others; 7. Spenser's Irish Environment: A View of the State of Ireland.
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