An Arrow against Idolatrie ... By H. A. i.e. Henry Ainsworth
Author : H. A.
Publisher :
Page : 148 pages
File Size : 19,64 MB
Release : 1640
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Author : H. A.
Publisher :
Page : 148 pages
File Size : 19,64 MB
Release : 1640
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Author : H. A.
Publisher :
Page : 178 pages
File Size : 34,77 MB
Release : 1611
Category : Idols and images
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Author : John PAGET (Minister of the Gospel.)
Publisher :
Page : 494 pages
File Size : 19,69 MB
Release : 1618
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Author : Scott Culpepper
Publisher : Mercer University Press
Page : 289 pages
File Size : 43,70 MB
Release : 2011
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0881462381
The first thorough treatment of Francis Johnson as the central focus of an academic work. Once referred to as the 'Bishop of Brownism' by one of his contemporaries, Johnson's theological and practical influence on Christian traditions as diverse as the Baptists, Congregationalists, and English Independents demonstrated the wide breadth of English Separatism's formative influence.
Author : Rhema Hokama
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 273 pages
File Size : 20,47 MB
Release : 2023-03-16
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 019288655X
This study explores the way Calvinist experientialism provided both a theology and an epistemology in the poetry of five early modern English poets: William Shakespeare, Robert Herrick, John Donne, Fulke Greville, and John Milton. In both official church ecclesiology and informal devotional practice, the Reformation introduced the idea that an individual's experience of devotion did not only entail feeling, but also thought. For early modern English people, bodily experience offered a means of corroborating and verifying devotional truth, making the invisible visible and knowable. This volume maintains that these religious developments gave early modern thinkers and poets a new epistemological framework for imagining and interpreting devotional intention and access. These Reformed models for devotion not only shaped how people experienced their encounters with God; the changing religious landscape of post-Reformation England also held profound implications for how English poets described sexual longing and access to earthly beloveds in the literary production of the period. In placing the works of English poets in conversation with devotional writers such as William Perkins, Samuel Hieron, Joseph Hall, and William Gouge, this book demonstrates how the English Calvinist tradition attributed epistemological potential to a wide range of ordinary experience, including sexual experience.
Author : Heinrich F. Plett
Publisher : Walter de Gruyter
Page : 598 pages
File Size : 18,58 MB
Release : 2008-08-22
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 3110201895
Since Jacob Burckhardt's Kultur der Renaissance in Italien (1869) rhetoric as a significant cultural factor of the renaissance has largely been neglected. The present study seeks to remedy this deficit regarding the arts by concentrating on literary theory and its aspects of imagination (inventio), genre (dispositio of the genera), style (elocutio), mnemonic architecture (memoria) and representation (actio), with illustrative examples taken from Shakespeare's works, but also on the intermedial rhetoric of painting and music. Particular attention is given to the rhetorical ideology of the Renaissance.
Author : S.J. Barnett
Publisher : Springer
Page : 208 pages
File Size : 24,60 MB
Release : 2016-07-27
Category : Philosophy
ISBN : 1349270970
Barnett traces the Christian critique of the Church and its history in Protestant (English) and Catholic (Italian) thought from the Reformation to the Enlightenment. More than one hundred and fifty years of bitter polemic between the two great confessions and their religious dissidents produced an unprecedented, comparative historical and sociological anticlericalism. In the last decades of the seventeenth century, English dissenting thought was pregnant with a devastating critique of the church, which came to be termed the 'Deist' view of Church history: by 1700 the cornerstone of high 'Enlightenment anticlerical thought' was in ascent.
Author : James Simpson
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 237 pages
File Size : 15,23 MB
Release : 2010-11-30
Category : Art
ISBN : 0199591652
Iconoclasm is not a barbaric act which takes place somewhere else but is instead a central strand of Anglo-American modernity. Our horror at the destruction of art derives in part from the fact that we did, and still do, that. This is most obviously true of England's iconoclastic century between 1538 and 1643, which stands at the core of this book.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 678 pages
File Size : 37,6 MB
Release : 1884
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Author : B. Reynolds
Publisher : Springer
Page : 238 pages
File Size : 17,74 MB
Release : 2005-11-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0230505031
To 'rematerialize' in the sense of Rematerializing Shakespeare: Authority and Representation on the Early Modern English Stage is not to recover a lost material infrastructure, as Marx spoke of, nor is it to restore to some material existence its priority over the imaginary. Indeed, this collection of work by some of the most highly-regarded critics in Shakespeare studies does not offer a single theoretical stance on any of the various forms of critical materialism (Marxism, cultural materialism, new historicism, transversal poetics, gender studies, or performance criticism), but rather demonstrates that the materiality of Shakespeare is multidimensional and consists of the imagination, the intended, and the desired. Nothing returns in this rematerialization, unless it is a return in the sense of the repressed, which, when it comes back, comes back as something else. An all-star line-up of contributors includes Kate McLuskie, Terence Hawkes, Catherine Belsey and Doug Bruster.