Showing Like a Queen: Female Authority and Literary Experiment in Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton

Showing Like a Queen: Female Authority and Literary Experiment in Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton

by Katherine Eggert
Showing Like a Queen: Female Authority and Literary Experiment in Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton

Showing Like a Queen: Female Authority and Literary Experiment in Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton

by Katherine Eggert

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Overview

For most Renaissance English thinkers, queenship was a catastrophe, a political accident that threatened to emasculate an entire nation. But some English poets and playwrights proved more inventive in their responses to female authority.

In Showing Like a Queen, Katherine Eggert argues that Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton turned the political problem of queenship to their advantage by using it as an occasion to experiment with new literary genres. Unlike other critics who have argued that a queen provoked only anxiety and defensiveness in her male subjects, Eggert demonstrates that even after her death Elizabeth I's forty-five-year reign enabled writers to entertain the fantasy of a counterpatriarchal realm.

Eggert traces a literary history of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries in which the destabilizing anomaly of female rule enables Spenser to reshape the genre of epic romance and gives Shakespeare scope to create the ruptured dynastic epic of the history plays, the psychologized tragedy of Hamlet, and the feminized tragedies of "Antony and Cleopatra" and "The Winter's Tale." Turning to the second half of the seventeenth century, Eggert reveals how even after more than sixty years of male governance, Milton bases his marital epic Paradise Lost upon the formulae of queenship.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780812235326
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Publication date: 01/11/2000
Series: Published in cooperation with Folger Shakespeare Library
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.97(d)

About the Author

Katherine Eggert is Associate Professor of English at the University of Colorado, Boulder.

Table of Contents

Note on Texts and Editionsix
1.Forms of Queenship: Female Rule and Literary Structure in the English Renaissance1
2.Genre and the Repeal of Queenship in Spenser's Faerie Queene22
3.Leading Ladies: Feminine Authority and Theatrical Effect in Shakespeare's History Plays51
4.Exclaiming Against Their Own Succession: Queenship, Genre, and What Happens in Hamlet100
5.The Late Queen of Famous Memory: Nostalgic Form in Antony and Cleopatra and The Winter's Tale131
6.Milton's Queenly Paradise169
Afterword: Queenship and New Feminine Genres201
Notes207
Bibliography255
Acknowledgments279
Index281
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