Isabella Whitney, Mary Sidney and Amelia Lanyer: Renaissance Women Poets
Social convention may have prevented Renaissance women writers from openly taking part in the political and religious debates of their day, but they found varied and innovative ways to intervene. Collecting the work of three great poets-Isabella Whitney, Mary Sidney, and Aemilia Lanyer-this...
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Social convention may have prevented Renaissance women writers from openly taking part in the political and religious debates of their day, but they found varied and innovative ways to intervene. Collecting the work of three great poets-Isabella Whitney, Mary Sidney, and Aemilia Lanyer-this volume repositions women writers of the Renaissance by presenting their poems in the context of their history and culture. Whitney's poems offer the only glimpse into her life, express a concern for women's lack of social and economic power, and powerfully evoke sixteenth-century London. Sidney produced potent translations of Petrarch's works and the Psalms, as well as original verse. Lanyer wrote poems that advocate and praise female virtue and Christian piety, but reflect a desire for an idealized, classless world. The strong and original voices of these three women-each from different social, cultural, and historical strata-demonstrate the emergence of a new female identity during the Renaissance and broaden the common notions of English Literature's golden age.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780140424096 (0140424091)
ASIN: 0140424091
Publish date: 2001-07-01
Publisher: Penguin
Pages no: 412
Edition language: English
I went to a college run by feminist nuns. Yep, get over it. I read very few of these poems in college. There is a reason for that. A few of the poems are good. Many aren't. I need me some Ben Johnson. He writes about cocks!