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Fall of Women in Early English Narrative Verse

Contributor(s): Schmitz, Gvtz (Author)

ISBN: 9780521179270

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

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Pub Date: August 11, 2011

Dewey: 821.03093520

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.70" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 1.02 lbs) 314 pages

Series: European Studies in English Literature

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Description: The image of the 'fallen woman' was a common one in Elizabethan literature. This 1990 study, translated from the original German by the author, deals with an unconventional aspect of the motif; the genre of 'complaint' in which writers enabled women to put their own case, bewailing their fate, invoking pity, and stressing private rather than public virtues. The book begins with a group of Elizabethan poems in which women lament their unfortunate lives. It goes on to deal with a range of works, tracing the complaint from classical models such as Ovid's Heroical Epistles to Chaucer's Legend of Good Women and Shakespeare's Lucrece. However, Dr Schmitz shows that the mode is not confined to historical tales, nor to the early or early modern periods. In Elizabethan times it occurs in novellas and meditations and can be seen as the inspiration for eighteenth-century Roxanas and the nineteenth-century Magdalen.

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