'Neo-Latin Writing in the British Isles'
Contribuinte(s) |
Knight, Sarah Tilg, Stefan |
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Data(s) |
01/06/2015
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Resumo |
This chapter seeks to identify cultural and generic trends and authorial methodologies that may serve to unify or to differentiate between the histories of neo-Latin literature in England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. It considers ways in which Latin served to bridge horizontal spaces (both physical and metaphorical) between four British regions, between neo-Latin writers in Britain and their continental predecessors and peers, and between Latin and the respective vernacular(s). It also examines vertical spaces (both chronological and cultural) between the neo-Latin and the classical Latin text, and between the linear demarcations of ‘early modern’, ‘Augustan’ and ‘Romantic’. An assessment of links between nationhood and the neo-Latin text as evinced by anthologies, antiquarian and quasi-historical writing, is followed by examples of generic continuity and metamorphosis in the British neo-Latin pastoral, ode and epigram. The concluding sections offer two generic case-studies (neo-Latin epic and didactic) both of which, it is argued, engendered the birth of specifically British versions of the mock-heroic and mock-didactic. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Oxford University Press |
Direitos |
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess |
Fonte |
Haan , E 2015 , 'Neo-Latin Writing in the British Isles' . in S Knight & S Tilg (eds) , The Oxford Handbook of Neo-Latin . Oxford University Press , Oxford and New York , pp. 427-443 . |
Tipo |
contributionToPeriodical |