The Arts of Empire: The Poetics of Colonialism from Raleigh to Milton

Portada
University of Delaware Press, 1998 - 275 páginas
Focusing on Ireland and the New World -- the two central colonial projects of Elizabethan and Stuart England -- this book explores the emergings of a colonialist consciousness in the writing and political workings of the English Renaissance. The literary production of the period engaged England's settlement of colonies in the New World and its colonial designs in Ireland by offering multiple perspectives in constant collision and negotiation.
 

Contenido

Acknowledgments
9
Introduction
13
1
31
32
32
Queens response to his marriage I would not
44
The world to her and both at her blest
63
2
64
persons to this Kingdome and to the Kingdome of
78
Even though Emilia lives up to what is expected of
119
snow which is neerer to the Orbe of the
130
4
142
and to drive them from their proper natural and native
190
5
194
The goodly prospect of some foreign land
206
CONCLUSION
240
Notes
242

cry This our earth is truly English and
88
3
104
because he was unable to extricate himself from his Calvinistic
105
lem of Labor in Paradise Lost in Subject
252
Works Cited
261
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