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Humanism Reading And English Literature 14301530 Daniel Wakelin

  • SKU: BELL-1628350
Humanism Reading And English Literature 14301530 Daniel Wakelin
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Humanism Reading And English Literature 14301530 Daniel Wakelin instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.11 MB
Pages: 256
Author: Daniel Wakelin
ISBN: 9780199215881, 9781435618961, 019921588X, 1435618963
Language: English
Year: 2007

Product desciption

Humanism Reading And English Literature 14301530 Daniel Wakelin by Daniel Wakelin 9780199215881, 9781435618961, 019921588X, 1435618963 instant download after payment.

Humanism is usually thought to come to England in the early sixteenth century. In this book, however, Daniel Wakelin uncovers the almost unknown influences of humanism on English literature in the preceding hundred years. He considers the humanist influences on the reception of some of Chaucer's work and on the work of important authors such as Lydgate, Bokenham, Caxton, and Medwall, and in many anonymous or forgotten translations, political treatises, and documents from the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. At the heart of his study is a consideration of William Worcester, the fifteenth-century scholar. Wakelin can trace the influence of humanism much earlier than was thought, because he examines evidence in manuscripts and early printed books of the English study and imitation of antiquity, in polemical marginalia on classical works, and in the ways in which people copied and shared classical works and translations. He also examines how various English works were shaped by such reading habits and, in turn, how those English works reshaped the reading habits of the wider community. Humanism thus, contrary to recent strictures against it, appears not as 'top-down' dissemination, but as a practical process of give-and-take between writers and readers. Humanism thus also prompts writers to imagine their potential readerships in ways which challenge them to re-imagine the political community and the intellectual freedom of the reader. Our views both of the fifteenth century and of humanist literature in English are transformed.

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