Description
By analyzing the strategies of Drake's reading practices, as well as those of several key contemporaries (including Jonson, Milton, and Clarendon), Kevin Sharpe demonstrates how reading in the rhetorical culture of Renaissance England was a political act. He explains how Drake, for example, by reading and rereading classical and humanist works of Tacitus, Machiavelli, Guicciardini, and Bacon, became the advocate of dissimulation, intrigue, and realpolitik. Authority, Sharpe argues, was experienced, reviewed, and criticized not only in the public forum but in the study, on the page, and in the imagination of early modern readers.
About the Author
Kevin Sharpe is professor of history at the University of Southampton and the author of The Personal Rule of Charles I, published by Yale University Press.
Book Information
ISBN 9780300187182
Author Kevin Sharpe
Format Paperback
Page Count 374
Imprint Yale University Press
Publisher Yale University Press
Weight(grams) 567g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 156mm * 20mm