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Annual volume of the best essays submitted to the Southeastern Renaissance Conference, this year with an emphasis on English drama and the cultural anxieties it expresses.Renaissance Papers collects the best scholarly essays submitted each year to the Southeastern Renaissance Conference. The 2015 volume features essays from the conference held at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, as well as essays submitted directly to the journal. The volume opens with a trio of reconsiderations of the impact of patronage on theater under the Stuarts, the role of the audience in Hamlet, and the role of King Arthur in The Faerie Queene. The heart of this year's journal is English drama, featuring essays on anxieties about nationhood in The Spanish Tragedy, generic anomalies and Chaucerian echoes in All's Well That Ends Well, the inversion of the hagiographical tradition in Shakespeare's Richard III, and the complexities coalescing around authorial identity under the Stuarts. In the penultimate essay, the focus shifts to the non-dramatic with a reconsideration of Milton's Paradise Regained and its relationship to the court masque. The last offering is a historical essay on the intersection of the personal and the political in John Wray's The Pilgrim'sJournal. The volume concludes with four book reviews.Contributors: David M. Bergeron, William A. Coulter, Timothy D. Crowley, Melissa Geil, Lainie Pomerleau, Robert Lanier Reid, Emily Stockard, Lewis Walker, John N. Wall.The journal is edited by Jim Pearce of North Carolina Central University and Ward Risvold of the University of Georgia.
JAMES PEARCE is Director of Graduate Studies in English at North Carolina Central University. WARD J. RISVOLD teaches writing in the J. Whitney Bunting College of Business at Georgia College and State University.
The Stuart Brothers and English Theater"You would pluck out the heart of my mystery": The Audience in HamletSpenser's Reformation Epic: Gloriana and the Unadulterated ArthurNationhood as Illusion in The Spanish TragedyThe Wife of Bath and All's Well That Ends WellA Necessary Evil: The Inverted Hagiography of Shakespeare's Richard IIIDeny, Omit, and Disavow: Becoming Ben Jonson"What strange parallax or optic skill": Paradise Regained and the MasqueA Protestant Pilgrim in Rome, Venice, and English Parliament: Sir John WrayBook Reviews