Parametri
- 220pagine
- 8 ore di lettura
Maggiori informazioni sul libro
Gloriana's Rule derives its title and contents from a specific event, an international conference organised by the Institute of English Studies (Universidade do Porto) in June 2003 to mark the four-hundredth anniversary of the death of Elizabeth I. But this inception does not entail that the volume's rational and goals can be described as celebratory. Rather than embodying a panegyric, the present collection aims to contribute the ongoing interrogation of the myth of Gloriana, considered in its central representations as much as in some of the more peripheral forms ( in politics, language, and social practices) that have helped define the enduring cultural perception of an "Elizabethan golden age".
Acquisto del libro
Gloriana's rule : literature, religion and power in the age of Elizabeth, Rui Manuel G. de Carvalho Homem, Fátima Vieira
- Lingua
- Pubblicato
- 2006
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (In brossura)
Metodi di pagamento
Ancora nessuna valutazione.
- Titolo
- Gloriana's rule : literature, religion and power in the age of Elizabeth
- Lingua
- Inglese
- Pubblicato
- 2006
- Formato
- In brossura
- Pagine
- 220
- ISBN10
- 9728025491
- ISBN13
- 9789728025496
- Serie
- Tag
- Saggistica, Arte / Cultura, Scienze sociali, Tema stórico, Storia, Esoterismo e religione, Sulla letteratura, Altra storia
- Descrizione
- Gloriana's Rule derives its title and contents from a specific event, an international conference organised by the Institute of English Studies (Universidade do Porto) in June 2003 to mark the four-hundredth anniversary of the death of Elizabeth I. But this inception does not entail that the volume's rational and goals can be described as celebratory. Rather than embodying a panegyric, the present collection aims to contribute the ongoing interrogation of the myth of Gloriana, considered in its central representations as much as in some of the more peripheral forms ( in politics, language, and social practices) that have helped define the enduring cultural perception of an "Elizabethan golden age".


