For this edition David Norbrook has provided an extensive introduction which gives an overview of developments in methodology and research since the first edition in 1984, responds to some criticisms, and points the way to further inquiry. Footnotes have been updated to take account of the current state of knowledge, and a chronological table has been provided for ease of reference. Norbrook brings out the range and adventurousness of early modern poets' engagements with the public world. The first part of the book establishes the more radical currents of thought shaping Renaissance poetry: civic humanism and apocalyptic Protestantism. Norbrook then shows how such leading Elizabethan poets as Sidney and Spenser, often seen as conservative monarchists, responded powerfully though sometimes ambivalently to more radical ideas. A chapter on Fulke Greville shows how that ambivalence reaches an extreme in some remarkable poetry.
Introduction to the Revised Edition ; Preface ; 1. The 'Utopia' and Radical Humanism ; 2. The Reformation and Prophetic Poetry ; 3. 'The Shepheardes Calender': Prophecy and the Court ; 4. Sidney and Political Pastoral ; 5. 'The Faerie Queene' and Elizabethan Politics ; 6. Voluntary Servitude: Fulke Greville and the Arts of Power ; 7. Jonson and the Jacobean Peace, 1603-16 ; 8. The Spenserians and King James, 1603-16 ; 9. Crisis and Reaction, 1617-28 ; 10. The Politics of Milton's Early Poetry ; Chronological Table ; Index
He aims to correct the distortions of history we have all inherited, and in bringing off that ambition he has written a book of exceptional interest. Nothing he discusses will be quite the same again ... This bold, finely researched and well-written book should have a decisive effect on our thinking about the poetry of the English Renaissance.
David Norbrook, Stephen Harrison, Philip Hardie, University of Oxford) Norbrook, David (Emeritus Merton Professor of English Literature, Emeritus Merton Professor of English Literature, University of Oxford) Harrison, Stephen (Fellow and Tutor in Classics, Corpus Christi College, and Professor of Latin Literature, Fellow and Tutor in Classics, Corpus Christi College, and Professor of Latin Literature, University of Cambridge) Hardie, Philip (Senior Research Fellow, Trinity College, and Honorary Professor of Latin Literature, Senior Research Fellow, Trinity College, and Honorary Professor of Latin Literature