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Miriam Jacobson 
Barbarous Antiquity 
Reorienting the Past in the Poetry of Early Modern England

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Cover of Miriam Jacobson: Barbarous Antiquity (ePUB)

In the late sixteenth century, English merchants and diplomats ventured into the eastern Mediterranean to trade directly with the Turks, the keepers of an important emerging empire in the Western Hemisphere, and these initial exchanges had a profound effect on English literature. While the theater investigated representations of religious and ethnic identity in its portrayals of Turks and Muslims, poetry, Miriam Jacobson argues, explored East-West exchanges primarily through language and the material text. Just as English markets were flooded with exotic goods, so was the English language awash in freshly imported words describing items such as sugar, jewels, plants, spices, paints, and dyes, as well as technological advancements such as the use of Arabic numerals in arithmetic and the concept of zero.
Even as these Eastern words and imports found their way into English poetry, poets wrestled with paying homage to classical authors and styles. In Barbarous Antiquity, Jacobson reveals how poems adapted from Latin or Greek sources and set in the ancient classical world were now reoriented to reflect a contemporary, mercantile Ottoman landscape. As Renaissance English writers including Shakespeare, Jonson, Marlowe, and Chapman weighed their reliance on classical poetic models against contemporary cultural exchanges, a new form of poetry developed, positioned at the crossroads of East and West, ancient and modern. Building each chapter around the intersection of an Eastern import and a classical model, Jacobson shows how Renaissance English poetry not only reconstructed the classical past but offered a critique of that very enterprise with a new set of words and metaphors imported from the East.

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Table of Content

List of Illustrations
Introduction: Trafficking with Antiquity: Trade, Poetry, and Remediation
PART I. BARBARIAN INVASIONS
Chapter 1. Strange Language: Imported Words in Jonson’s Ars Poetica
Chapter 2. Shaping Subtlety: Sugar in The Arte of English Poesie
PART II. REDEEMING OVID
Chapter 3. Publishing Pain: Zero in The Rape of Lucrece
Chapter 4. Breeding Fame: Horses and Bulbs in Venus and Adonis
PART III. REORIENTING ANTIQUITY
Chapter 5. On Chapman Crossing Marlowe’s Hellespont: Pearls, Dyes, and Ink in Hero and Leander
Epilogue: The Peregrinations of Barbarous Antiquity
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments

About the author

Miriam Jacobson is Associate Professor of English at the University of Georgia.
Language English ● Format EPUB ● Pages 296 ● ISBN 9780812290073 ● File size 2.3 MB ● Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc. ● City Philadelphia ● Country US ● Published 2014 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 3358806 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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