Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2078386327> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2078386327 endingPage "598" @default.
- W2078386327 startingPage "567" @default.
- W2078386327 abstract "How might the perennial issue of Spenser's social standing be altered by recent revisions of his position in Ireland? In the past decade scholars have persuasively argued that Ireland was far more than a backdrop for the work of the Poet's poet, and that his work is fundamentally implicated in an English colonial project. They have also shown, however, that Spenser was not merely an apologist for Elizabethan imperialism; his outlook concerning Ireland was as often equivocal as it was resolute. As David Baker argues, Whatever Spenser was at the end of his life, he was no longer (if he ever had been) purely 'English.' Spenser, rather, was the product of a life lived on—and 'between'—two islands, and the inheritor of the complexly imbricated histories of both. 1 What, then, might these revisions tell us about the social standing of one making such complexly imbricated utterances? I want to address these questions through readings of the Amoretti and Epithalamion in part to build on the long association of the poems with Spenser's personal experience in Ireland. But I also want to examine the Amoretti and Epithalamion because it offers something like a microcosm of Spenser's literary and political existences—especially his purported transition from the world of court to a private, bourgeois identity. Drawing on the hybrid Spenser produced by the new colonialist readings helps to reimagine the question of Spenser's social standing by reconsidering the ways social distinction, and class itself, are produced in the poems. If Spenser existed between islands, he also existed between modes of social distinction. 2 My thesis is that, like Spenser in Ireland, the speaker of Amoretti and Epithalamion tries to create his own social authority by mimicking an idealized conception of nobles, especially nobles in Ireland. Through this desire for and imagination of noble, and especially royal, privilege, however, emerges a new mode of creating social distinction: class. [End Page 567]" @default.
- W2078386327 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2078386327 creator A5082889646 @default.
- W2078386327 date "2002-01-01" @default.
- W2078386327 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W2078386327 title ""So plenty makes me poore": Ireland, Capitalism, and Class in Spenser's Amoretti and Epithalamion" @default.
- W2078386327 cites W135245490 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1487019888 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1524562639 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1533200881 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1556289982 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1565250487 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1571714625 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1572147454 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1582427774 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1598748698 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1908401045 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1989168485 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1989235285 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1991483674 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2003910828 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2006016444 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2007767262 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2010480874 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2017326508 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2020089980 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2026775299 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2029319199 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2035267794 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2035271626 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2040546364 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2043082032 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2044683494 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2045404480 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2047955549 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2051956946 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2068823242 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2070488390 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2076101587 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2082007699 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2084659536 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2089919461 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2111625169 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2114957927 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2115781757 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2116015784 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2123675566 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2124735646 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2132075365 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2136660877 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2140022783 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2141153886 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2142477523 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2147083556 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2151298432 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2152911293 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2154026584 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2159237069 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2164771589 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2222103575 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2226127147 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2228810763 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2312736836 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2313857559 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2313944526 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2314417842 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2316682963 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2317338446 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2319867041 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2330868538 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2746403160 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2795750492 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2796267991 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2797511642 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2797620331 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2801460104 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2978071029 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W3130639034 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W3146949262 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W3149925164 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W403424558 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W565503997 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W570203254 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W580260095 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W594153572 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W602516320 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W632875970 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W650611230 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W1986752579 @default.
- W2078386327 cites W2472865999 @default.
- W2078386327 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/elh.2002.0030" @default.
- W2078386327 hasPublicationYear "2002" @default.
- W2078386327 type Work @default.
- W2078386327 sameAs 2078386327 @default.
- W2078386327 citedByCount "3" @default.
- W2078386327 countsByYear W20783863272016 @default.
- W2078386327 countsByYear W20783863272019 @default.
- W2078386327 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.