Showing 91 to 100 of 368 results matching your query: The Faerie Queene adaptaions
91) 49.2.3 Izumi Nemoto: A Response to Professor Yulia Ryzhik with Respect
read more92) 50.1.5 Dennis Austin Britton and Kimberly Anne Coles: Beyond the Pale
What happens when we think about race in the works of Edmund Spenser? In spite of the growing body of ...
read more93) 42.2.9 Marshall Grossman: Mimetic Verisimilitude and Poetic Truth in Book II of The Faerie Queene
The identification of art and imitation is ubiquitous in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England. But the obligation to “hold as ’twere ...
read more94) 45.2.26 Patrick Cheney: Close Reading: Introduction
The following papers were originally presented at the International Spenser Conference in Dublin, Ireland, on May 19, 2015, in a ...
read more95) 46.1.8 Tamsin Badcoe: Paul J. Hecht and J. B. Lethbridge, eds., Spenser in the Moment
Spenser in the Moment. Edited by Paul J. Hecht and J.B. Lethbridge. Fairleigh Dickinson UP, 2015. xviii + 254 pp ...
read more96) 43.1.2 Luca Manini (trans. Gianmarco Lampugnani): Notes on the Italian translation of Spenser’s Faerie Queene
When I was asked by Nuccio Ordine for a contribution to “Classici della letteratura europea,” a new collection devised by ...
read more97) 43.1.1 Joseph Loewenstein: The Literary Biography of a Collective: The Familiar Letters of G.H. and Signior Immerito
The Literary Biography of a Collective: The Familiar Letters of G.H. and Signior Immerito
read more98) 42.2.12 Judith H. Anderson: Judith H. Anderson review of Hadfield
Hadfield, Andrew. Edmund Spenser: A Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. xxi + 624 pp. ISBN: 978-0199591022. $45 cloth.
read more99) 43.3.76 : MLA Annual Convention
January 9-12th, 2014 Chicago, Illinois
read more100) 45.2.24 Maria Devlin: Finding Freedom in Spenser’s Rhetorical Places
Critics often oppose allegory and freedom.[1] Angus Fletcher and Gordon Teskey find that allegory excludes freedom in that it ...
read more