The English civil wars in the literary imagination

The English civil wars in the literary imagination
About this book
"The English civil wars loom large in seventeenth-century history and literature. This period, which culminated in the execution of a king, the dismantling of the Established Church, the inauguration of a commonwealth, and the assumption of rule by a lord protector, was one of profound change and disequilibrium.
Focusing on writers as major as Milton, Marvell, Herrick, and Vaughan, and as misunderstood as Fane, Overton, and the poet Eliza, the fifteen essays in this collection discuss not only the representation of the civil wars but also the ways in which the civil wars were anticipated, refigured, and refracted in the century's literary imagination."--BOOK JACKET.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL18955843W
Subjects
HistoryEnglish literatureLiterature and historyPolitics and literatureIntellectual lifeHistory and criticismLiterature and the warWar and literatureEnglish literature, history and criticismEnglish literature--history and criticismEnglish literature--early modern, 1500-1700--history and criticismPolitics and literature--historyPolitics and literature--great britain--history--17th centuryLiterature and history--historyLiterature and history--great britain--history--17th centuryHistory--literature and the warPr438.p65 e54 1999820.9/358