Introduction: Delimitations, Definitions, Disciplines -- 1. Test-driving Deixis: Formulating Issues, Coining Concepts -- 2. Edmund Spenser's 'Epithalamion' and Strategic Spatiality -- 3. William Shakespeare's Sonnets and Deictic Textuality -- 4. Lady Mary Wroth's Song I and Some Versions of Pastoral Deixis -- 5. John Donne's 'Hymne to God my God, in my Sicknesse' and Prevenient Proximity -- 6. Here Today and Gone Tomorrow? Conclusions and Invitations.
Summary:
"This book engages with deictics ('pointing' words like here/there, this/that) of space. It focuses on texts by Donne, Shakespeare, Spenser, and Wroth in particular, relating their forms of deixis to cultural and generic developments. But it also briefly suggests parallels with both iconic and neglected texts from a range of later historical periods and raises broader issues currently of interest to critics specializing in those periods, such as the workings of spatiality and of the material text. Its own methods include cultural critique, genre study, interdisciplinarity, and close reading. The book reconsiders questions central to lyric theory, challenging, for example, assumptions about its immediacy and length. In so doing, the volume both participates in and evaluates contemporary developments in the discipline, especially of the new formalism (or more accurately formalisms) and of space/place studies, as well as the potentialities and risks of interdisciplinarity"-- Provided by publisher.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.