9. The sonnet sequence as speech sound continuum: how we read Shake-speares Sonnets / 1. English Petrarchism: from commentary on poetry to poetry as commentary / Andrew Eastman. 2. Early modern theories of the sonnet: accounts of the quatorzain in Italy, France and England in the second half of the sixteenth century / Remi Vuillemin -- II. Performing the English sonnet -- 3. Sonnet-mongers on the early modern English stage / Guillaume Coatalen -- 4. In and out: Shakespeare's shifting sonnets. From Love's Labour's Lost to The Passionate Pilgrim / Sophie Chiari -- III. Placing the sonnet: sonnets isolated or sequenced -- 5. `Small parcelles': unsequenced sonnets in the sixteenth century / Chris Stamatakis -- 6. `And sweetly nectarize this bitter gall': Gabriel Harvey's sonnet therapy / Elisabeth Chaghafi -- 7. Barnabe Barnes's sonnet sequences: moral conversion and prodigal authorship / Remi Vuillemin -- IV. Editing the sonnet -- 8. The Muses Garland (1603): fragment of a printed verse miscellany / Hugh Gazzard -- 9. The sonnet sequence as speech sound continuum: how we read Shake-speares Sonnets / Andrew Eastman.
Summary:
"This volume questions and qualifies commonly accepted assumptions about the early modern English sonnet: that it was a strictly codified form, most often organised in sequences, which only emerged at the very end of the sixteenth century and declined as fast as it had bloomed, and that minor poets merely participated in the sonnet fashion by replicating established conventions. Drawing from book history and relying on close reading and textual criticism, this collection offers a more nuanced account of the history of the sonnet. It discusses how sonnets were written, published and received in England as compared to mainland Europe, and explores the works of major (Shakespeare, Sidney, Spenser) and minor (Barnes, Harvey) poets alike. Reflecting on current editorial practices, it also provides the first modern edition of an early seventeenth-century Elizabethan miscellany including sonnets presumably by Sidney and Spenser."-- Publisher description.
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.