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Renaissance Papers collects the best scholarly essays submitted each year to the Southeastern Renaissance Conference. The 2024 volume features essays from the conference held at The Citadel, as well as essays submitted directly to the journal. The opening essay focuses on an idiosyncratic strategy used for fundraising by the English Crown: Queen Elizabeth's "poetry" lottery. Five essays on Shakespeare probe the complexity of his plays. The first is a Jungian analysis of how the archetype of the dragon manifests itself in King Lear. It is followed by a study of how early modern exercise culture constructs masculinity and health in As You Like It. A provocative reinterpretation of A Midsummer Night's Dream then illuminates the culturally subversive way in which Shakespeare portrays his fairies. The fourth and fifth essays examine the implications of female political agency in Measure for Measure..
LISANDRA ESTEVEZ teaches Art History at Winston-Salem State University. JAMES PEARCE is Director of Graduate Studies in English at North Carolina Central University. TIMOTHY PYLES is Director of Theatre at Marywood University.
1. Queen Elizabeth's Poetic Lottery - Steven May2. Lear as Dragon of Discord: A Jungian Analysis of William Shakespeare's King Lear - Jesse Russell3. Dost Thou Even Hoist? Exercise Culture and Shakespeare - Matthew Carter4. Reclaiming Fairy Belief: The Radically Subversive Fairies of A Midsummer Night's Dream - Timothy Pyles5. The Failure of Knowledge in Measure for Measure - Mary Villeponteaux6. "Whence comes this restraint?" The Perils of Political Theology in Measure for Measure - Lauren Silberman7. "Many Excellent Books": Reading and Study in Hester Pulter's The Unfortunate Florinda - Rachel Roberts8. Portraits of Bianca Cappello, True Daughter of Venice and Grand Duchess of Florence: Identity by Design - Jasmin Cyril9. The "Restoration" of 1603 - Andrew Shifflett10. 'Things Rarely Attempted:' The Perilous Allusions of Paradise Lost - Vergil Demery