England, Neo-Latin, and the Continental Journey: Linguistic and Textual Itineraries


Autoria(s): Haan, Estelle
Contribuinte(s)

Dobranski, Stephen

Data(s)

2017

Resumo

This chapter examines the ramifications of continental travel and associated epistolary communication for English poets of the period. It argues that recourse to neo-Latin, the universal language of diplomacy, served not only to establish a sense of shared space—linguistic, cultural, generic—between England and the continent, but also to signal self-conscious differences (climatic, geographical, historical, political) between England and her continental peers. Through an investigation of a range of ‘performances’ on stages that were ‘academic’, poetic, autobiographical, and epistolographic, it assesses the central role of neo-Latin as a language that underwent a series of textual itineraries. These ‘itineraries’ manifest themselves in a number of ways. Neo-Latin as a shared linguistic medium can facilitate, and quite uniquely so, intertextual engagement with the classics, but now ancient Rome, its language, its mythology, its hierarchy of genres, are viewed through a seventeenth-century lens and appropriated by poets in both England and Italy to describe contemporary events, whether personal, or political. Close examination of the neo-Latin poetry of Milton and Marvell reveals, it is argued, a self-fashioning coloured by such textual itineraries and interchanges. The absorption and replication of continental literary and linguistic methodologies (the academic debate; the etymological play of Marinism; the hybridity of neo-Latin and Italian voices) reveal in short a linguistic and textual reciprocity that gave birth to something very new.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/england-neolatin-and-the-continental-journey-linguistic-and-textual-itineraries(ac607412-65d0-4390-a608-da24a6fac80a).html

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Cambridge University Press

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Haan , E 2017 , England, Neo-Latin, and the Continental Journey: Linguistic and Textual Itineraries . in S Dobranski (ed.) , Political Turmoil: Early Modern British Literature in Transition, 1623-1660 . Cambridge University Press , Cambridge .

Tipo

contributionToPeriodical