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European Literary Careers: The Author from Antiquity to the Renaissance

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European Literary Careers: The Author from Antiquity to the Renaissance

Edited by Patrick Cheney and Frederick A. de Armas
University of Toronto Press © 2002

Cloth: Dec 22 2002 Active/Available

World Rights
256pp /
Volume


Authorial studies, or 'career criticism' is a new and distinctive branch of interpretive methodology that explores various paths of European careers, particularly literary careers. In this first book-length study in the field various specialists from Italian, French, English, and Spanish studies collectively discuss literary careers spanning from classical antiquity through the Renaissance. They argue that the idea of a literary career evolves slowly, derives centrally from Virgil, and that the periodization from classical, medieval and Renaissance culture helps to elucidate the details of that evolution.

Including authors from Theocritus to Spenser, the contributors correlate an author's sense of a career to the period of history in which he or she is writing, foregrounding his or her role in the multi-sphered life of the nation, especially its institutions of family, state, and church. Authorship and agency, genre and genre patterning, imitation and intertextuality, politics and religions, sexuality and gender all become part of the complex template for defining the idea of a literary career. Unique in both scope and topic, this study breaks new ground in current critical theory, allowing for complex interrelations between models of authorial agency and models of social construction.

Patrick Cheney is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Pennsylvania State University.

Frederick A. de Armas is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in Humanities and chair of the Department of Romance Languages and Literature at the University of Chicago.





University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial support for its publishing activities of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).

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