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This collection of fifteen essays by leading scholars examines the extraordinary diversity and richness of the writing produced in response to, and as part of, the upheaval in the religious, political and cultural life of the nation which constituted the English Revolution. The turmoil of the civil wars fought out from 1639 to 1651, the shock of the execution of Charles I, and the uncertainty of the succeeding period of constitutional experiment were enacted and refigured in writing which both shaped and was shaped by the tumultuous times. The various strategies of this battle of the books are explored through essays on the course of events, intellectual trends and the publishing industry; in discussions of canonical figures such as Milton, Marvell, Bunyan and Clarendon; and in accounts of women's writing and of fictional and non-fictional prose. A full chronology, detailed guides to further reading and a glossary are included.
List of illustrations; List of contributors; Chronologies; List of abbreviations; Introduction; Part I. Contexts: 1. The causes and course of the British Civil Wars John Morrill; 2. Ideas in conflict: political and religious thought during the English Revolution Martin Dzelzainis; 3. Texts in conflict: the press and the Civil War Sharon Achinstein; Part II. Radical Voices: 4. Radical pamphleteering Thomas N. Corns; 5. Milton's prose David Loewenstein; 6. Andrew Marvell and the Revolution Annabel Patterson; 7. Women's poetry Susan Wiseman; 8. Women's histories Helen Wilcox and Sheila Ottway; 9. Prophecy, enthusiasm and female pamphleteers Elaine Hobby; 10. Royalist lyric Alan Rudrum; 11. Prayer-book devotion: the literature of the proscribed Church of England Isabel Rivers; 12. Royalist epic and romance Paul Salzman; 13. The English revolution and historiography David Norbrook; 14. Paradise Lost from Civil War to Restoration Nigel Smith; 15. Bunyan and the holy war Richard L. Greaves; Historical glossary.
"Collectively, these essays represent revisionist history at its best, because the innovative views their authors expound challenge previous assumptions and point to future lines of inquiry...Very highly recommended for upper-division undergraduates through faculty." CHOICE
Tessa Whitehouse, N. H. Keeble, University of London) Whitehouse, Tessa (Senior Lecturer in Eighteenth-Century Literature, Queen Mary, University of Stirling) Keeble, N. H. (Emeritus Professor of English Studies
John Milton, KEEBLE, Keeble, N. H. Keeble, Nicholas McDowell, University of Stirling) Keeble, N. H. (Professor Emeritus of English Studies, University of Exeter) McDowell, Nicholas (Professor of Early Modern Literature and Thought
N. H. Keeble, Geoffrey F. Nuttall, N. H. Keeble, Geoffrey F. Nuttall, Fellow of the Royal Historical Society) Keeble, N. H. (Reader in English, Department of English Studies, Reader in English, Department of English Studies, University of Stirling
N. H. Keeble, Geoffrey F. Nuttall, N. H. Keeble, Geoffrey F. Nuttall, University of Stirling) Keeble, N. H. (Reader in English, Department of English Studies, Reader in English, Department of English Studies