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Posthumous Love Eros And The Afterlife In Renaissance England Ramie Targoff

  • SKU: BELL-51437384
Posthumous Love Eros And The Afterlife In Renaissance England Ramie Targoff
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Posthumous Love Eros And The Afterlife In Renaissance England Ramie Targoff instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Chicago Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.25 MB
Pages: 224
Author: Ramie Targoff
ISBN: 9780226110462, 022611046X
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

Posthumous Love Eros And The Afterlife In Renaissance England Ramie Targoff by Ramie Targoff 9780226110462, 022611046X instant download after payment.

For Dante and Petrarch, posthumous love was a powerful conviction. Like many of their contemporaries, both poets envisioned their encounters with their beloved in heaven—Dante with Beatrice, Petrarch with Laura. But as Ramie Targoff reveals in this elegant study, English love poetry of the Renaissance brought a startling reversal of this tradition: human love became definitively mortal. Exploring the boundaries that Renaissance English poets drew between earthly and heavenly existence, Targoff seeks to understand this shift and its consequences for English poetry.
Targoff shows that medieval notions of the somewhat flexible boundaries between love in this world and in the next were hardened by Protestant reformers, who envisioned a total break between the two. Tracing the narrative of this rupture, she focuses on central episodes in poetic history in which poets developed rich and compelling compensations for the lack of posthumous love—from Thomas Wyatt’s translations of Petrarch’s love sonnets and the Elizabethan sonnet series of Shakespeare and Spencer to thecarpe diempoems of the seventeenth century. Targoff’s centerpiece isRomeo and Juliet, where she considers how Shakespeare’s reworking of the Italian story stripped away any expectation that the doomed teenagers would reunite in heaven. Casting new light on these familiar works of poetry and drama, this book ultimately demonstrates that the negation of posthumous love brought forth a new mode of poetics that derived its emotional and aesthetic power from its insistence upon love’s mortal limits.

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