Women and the English Renaissance: Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620 |
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Page 7
Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620 Linda Woodbridge. two strains converged to produce at the same time new literary conven- tions and new ways of looking at contemporary reality . I will focus on the years 1540 to 1620 ...
Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620 Linda Woodbridge. two strains converged to produce at the same time new literary conven- tions and new ways of looking at contemporary reality . I will focus on the years 1540 to 1620 ...
Page 81
Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620 Linda Woodbridge. with no apparent malicious intent , because they ... literature and life . First , one might , with Utley , regard the medieval / Tudor attitude toward jest as the more ...
Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620 Linda Woodbridge. with no apparent malicious intent , because they ... literature and life . First , one might , with Utley , regard the medieval / Tudor attitude toward jest as the more ...
Page 150
Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620 Linda Woodbridge. Vir are contemporary , topical , anchored in the actions of living women . In the remaining chapters of part 2 , while my main interest is in the ways literature ...
Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620 Linda Woodbridge. Vir are contemporary , topical , anchored in the actions of living women . In the remaining chapters of part 2 , while my main interest is in the ways literature ...
Contents
Exordium I | 1 |
The Genre | 13 |
The Elizabethan Controversy | 49 |
Copyright | |
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aggressive Agrippa antifeminism antifeminist Antony argues argument Arraignment behavior Book breeches Castiglione character classical Cleopatra contemporary Courtier courtly love CRUZ The University defense of women dialogue disguise drama Duchess Duchess of Malfi effeminacy effeminate Elyot's English Enobarbus Epicoene essay exempla female feminine feminism feminist formal attack formal controversy formal defense genre gossips Gosynhyll Gosynhyll's Haec-Vir hath haue Henry hermaphrodite hic mulier Honest Whore husband Jacobean Joseph Swetnam Lady literary London loue lover Lucrece lust maid male marriage marry masculine misogynist misogyny Mistress mulier Mulierum Pean nature paradox Patient Grissill Petrarchan play praise Queen Renaissance literature SANTA CRUZ satiric scene School House scold sexual Shakespeare shrew shrewishness slander Sowernam Speght stage misogynist stereotype suggests Swetnam the Woman-hater Taming thee Thomas thou tion tradition transvestism transvestite Tuvil University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA virago vpon whore widow wife wives woman womankind write