Words at War

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AGGIUNGI AL CARRELLO
NOTE EDITORE
The English Civil War was not simply a conflict between two opposing, unstable, complicated alliances of various factions, but a war of words. Supporters of the King and allies of Parliament and the New Model Army clashed over ideals, ideas, and concepts as they each sought to impose their understanding of history and visions of the future, realizing that victory could only be secured by establishing a political and cultural language that would guide and direct those who used it. Accordingly, the Civil War witnessed vociferous arguments over many key English words central to life and thought in the seventeenth century, and often up to the present day. Words at War seeks to bring together scholars of literature, history, religion, and philosophy to analyse the ways in which key terms were deployed and debated in the Civil War and Commonwealth. In doing so it refocuses attention on ideas and concepts that shaped the modern world well beyond the bloody conflict on the battlefield.

SOMMARIO
1 - God in Scripture Study Aids2 - God in Hobbes3 - Providence in Browne4 - Providence in the Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell5 - Freedom in Early Quaker Tracts6 - Slavery in John Taylor7 - Freedom in the Cavalier Poets8 - Nature and Natural Law in Radical Writers9 - Law in Clarendon10 - Nature in Cowley11 - Nature in Lovelace12 - The People in Marvell and Cavendish13 - The King in the Parliamentary Debates of 165714 - The People in Royalist Women's Writing15 - The King and the People in the Newsbooks16 - Conscience in Marvell17 - Conscience and Nation in Milton 1640-166018 - Virtue and Defeat in Davenant and Cowley19 - Virtue in Milton20 - Checks and Balances: The Birth of a Vocabulary

AUTORE
Andrew Hadfield is Professor of English at the University of Sussex and a Fellow of the British Academy and the English Association. His books include Shakespeare and Republicanism; Edmund Spenser: A Life; Lying in Early Modern English Culture: From the Oath of Supremacy to the Oath of Allegiance; Literature and Class: From the Peasants' Revolt to the French Revolution; John Donne: In the Shadow of Religion; and Thomas Nashe and Late Elizabethan Writing. Paul Hammond is Professor of Seventeenth-Century English Literature at the University of Leeds and a Fellow of the British Academy. His books include Dryden and the Traces of Classical Rome; Milton and the People; Milton's Complex Words: Essays on the Conceptual Structure of 'Paradise Lost'; and Tragic Agency in Classical Drama from Aeschylus to Voltaire. He is co-editor of The Poems of John Dryden, Five Volumes and editor-in-chief of a new Longman Annotated English Poets edition of The Complete Poems of John Milton.

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI
  • Condizione: Nuovo
  • ISBN: 9780197267622
  • Collana: Proceedings of the British Academy
  • Dimensioni: 240 x 23.0 x 162 mm Ø 682 gr
  • Formato: Copertina rigida
  • Pagine Arabe: 348