Dictionary of Literary-Rhetorical Conventions of the English Renaissance
By (Author) Marjorie P. Donker
By (author) George Muldrow
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
18th June 1982
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: poetry and poets
821.30321
Hardback
268
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
624g
Product information not available.
The Dictionary of Literary-Rhetorical Conventions is an unusual reference in that it is also an anthology of critical of critical essays. It contains 68 entries, ranging from acrostic' to vulgar language, ' and from one paragraph to ten pages, defining literary terms (genres, verse forms, and other verbal conventions) as they were used in the Renaissance. . . . The The research evidenced in these historical essays is substantial. . . . There are two useful appendices. The first lists modern literary terms matched with relevant essays on Renaissance terms. . . . The second appendix provides a useful list of categories for the particular terms under consideration. . . . The index is meticulous and detailed, with ample cross-referencing and careful subdivisions of topics. . . . The Dictionary can be of both use and delight to the researcher in Renaissance literature. Accurate and thorough in its scholarship, lucid and concrete in its style, it is one of those rare reference works that can be actually read, not merely referred to.-Literary Research Newsletter
"The Dictionary of Literary-Rhetorical Conventions is an unusual reference in that it is also an anthology of critical of critical essays. It contains 68 entries, ranging from acrostic' to vulgar language, ' and from one paragraph to ten pages, defining literary terms (genres, verse forms, and other verbal conventions) as they were used in the Renaissance. . . . The The research evidenced in these historical essays is substantial. . . . There are two useful appendices. The first lists modern literary terms matched with relevant essays on Renaissance terms. . . . The second appendix provides a useful list of categories for the particular terms under consideration. . . . The index is meticulous and detailed, with ample cross-referencing and careful subdivisions of topics. . . . The Dictionary can be of both use and delight to the researcher in Renaissance literature. Accurate and thorough in its scholarship, lucid and concrete in its style, it is one of those rare reference works that can be actually read, not merely referred to."-Literary Research Newsletter
MARJORIE DONKER is Professor of English at Western Washington University where her areas of specialization are comic and dramatic theory, Shakespeare, and English literature of the 16th and early 17th centuries. She is co-author of Dictionary of Literary-Rhetorical Conventions of the English Renaissance (Greenwood, 1982).