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Readers and Authorship in Early Modern England

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Readers and Authorship in Early Modern England Synopsis

While authors in early modern England were gaining new authority - legally, economically and symbolically - Renaissance readers also were expected to participate in and make use of an author's writings. In this book, Stephen B. Dobranski examines how the seventeenth-century phenomenon of printing apparently unfinished works ushered in a new emphasis on authors' responsibility for written texts while it simultaneously reinforced Renaissance practices of active reading. Bringing together textual studies, literary criticism and book trade history, Dobranski provides fresh insight into Renaissance constructions of authorship and offers discerning interpretations of publications by Sir Philip Sidney, Ben Jonson, John Donne, Robert Herrick and John Milton. The omissions in all these writers' works provide a unique window into English literary history: through these blank spaces we glimpse the tension between implication and inference, between writers' intentions and readers' responses and between an individual author and a collaborative community.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780521120180
Publication date: 24th September 2009
Author: Stephen B Georgia State University Dobranski
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 244 pages
Genres: Literary studies: general