Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Renaissance Papers
- Who Was Jane Scrope?
- “All is but Hinnying Sophistry”: The Role of Puritan Logic in Bartholomew Fair
- Grotesque Sex: Hermaphroditism and Castration in Jonson's Volpone
- The Devil, Not the Pope: Anti-Catholicism and Textual Difference in Doctor Faustus
- “Straunge Motion”: Puppetry, Faust, and the Mechanics of Idolatry
- The Ovidian Recusatio in Marlowe's Hero and Leander
- “To catchen hold of that long chaine”: Spenserian echoes in Jonson's “Epode”
- Devotion in the Present Progressive: Clothing and Lyric Renewal in The Temple
- Dost thou see a Martin who is Wise in his own Conceit? There is more hope in a fool than in him.
- English Dogs and Barbary Horses: Horses, Dogs, and Identity in Renaissance England
- Review Section
Review Section
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Renaissance Papers
- Who Was Jane Scrope?
- “All is but Hinnying Sophistry”: The Role of Puritan Logic in Bartholomew Fair
- Grotesque Sex: Hermaphroditism and Castration in Jonson's Volpone
- The Devil, Not the Pope: Anti-Catholicism and Textual Difference in Doctor Faustus
- “Straunge Motion”: Puppetry, Faust, and the Mechanics of Idolatry
- The Ovidian Recusatio in Marlowe's Hero and Leander
- “To catchen hold of that long chaine”: Spenserian echoes in Jonson's “Epode”
- Devotion in the Present Progressive: Clothing and Lyric Renewal in The Temple
- Dost thou see a Martin who is Wise in his own Conceit? There is more hope in a fool than in him.
- English Dogs and Barbary Horses: Horses, Dogs, and Identity in Renaissance England
- Review Section
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2015