Familial forms politics and genealogy in seventeenth-century English literature /
Discusses the fate of the family=state analogy in 17th century English literature.
Furkejuvvon:
Váldodahkki: | |
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Searvvušdahkki: | |
Materiálatiipa: | Elektrovnnalaš E-girji |
Giella: | eaŋgalasgiella |
Almmustuhtton: |
Newark : Lanham, Md. :
University of Delaware Press ; Rowman & Littlefield,
c2011.
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Fáttát: | |
Liŋkkat: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
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Sisdoallologahallan:
- Assessing the politics of genealogy. The Jesuit, the King, and a lady: form and Jacobean patriarchalism
- John Milton's family politics from Charles I to Charles II. Denying patricide; defining the domestic. Copulating with the mother: Paradise lost and the politics of begetting. Milton's birth abortive: remaking family at the end of Paradise lost
- Chasing shadows: reproductive time in the exclusion crisis. Haunted times. Cheating "death's vast jaws": the troubled promise of reproduction in Lucy Hutchison's Order and disorder. "In his son renew'd": resisting reproduction in John Dryden's Absalom and Achitophel
- Beyond the family-state analogy: reconsidering genealogy. A world without father or mother: Mary Astell's A serious proposal to the ladies.