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Journal Article
Thomas Nashe: A Critical Introduction
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1962) 23 (4): 399–400.
Published: 01 December 1962
...John Dale Ebbs G. R. Hibbard. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1962. Pp. xi + 262. $6.00. Copyright © 1962 by Duke University Press 1962 John Dale Ebbs 399
Thomas Nashe: A Critical Introduction. By G. R...
Journal Article
Nashe's Authorship of the Prose Scenes in Faustus ∗
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1942) 3 (1): 17–40.
Published: 01 March 1942
...Paul H. Kocher Copyright © 1942 by Duke University Press 1942 ∗ To the Folger Shakespeare Library I am gratefully indebted for the opportunity to do this and other work under the grant of a research fellowship. NASHE’S AUTHORSHIP OF THE PROSE SCENES...
Journal Article
Asinine Heroism and the Mediation of Empire in Chaucer, Marlowe, and Shakespeare
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (2020) 81 (3): 319–347.
Published: 01 September 2020
... follow Marlowe and Nashe’s model in Dido, Queen of Carthage by looking to Chaucer as the poetic authority for classical myth. Like Chaucer, both playwrights foreground the destruction left in empire’s wake. A Midsummer Night’s Dream imagines a retelling of Dido’s story that privileges her authority over...
Journal Article
“Les Contemplations” of Victor Hugo: An Allegory of the Creative Process
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1977) 38 (4): 405–407.
Published: 01 December 1977
...PATRICIA A. WARD NASH SUZANNE. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1976. ix + 229 pp. $13.50. Copyright © 1977 by Duke University Press 1977 GEORGE WOODCOCK 405
touchstone by which to judge the moral amorphousness that marks the social...
Journal Article
Henry James and the Cities of the Plain
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1968) 29 (3): 297–311.
Published: 01 September 1968
... untouched.
No consideration of the theme of inversion in the work of James
can overlook the much-discussed Gabriel Nash of The Tragic Muse.
Critics have been too much concerned with the irrelevancy of iden-
tifying Nash with a real-life model. Cargill argues for Oscar Wilde;
Quentin...
Journal Article
Antwerp and the Elizabethan Mind
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1963) 24 (1): 53–60.
Published: 01 March 1963
... of Thomas Nashe, ed. R. B. McKerrow (London, 1908), IV, 228.
For a brief discussion of this subject, see also CHEL, IV (1909), 323-24.
53
54 Antwerp avad the Elizabethan Mind
The question of the Low Countries was a vexing one for all of the
great Western...
Journal Article
Shakespeare and the Earl of Southampton
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1970) 31 (1): 115–118.
Published: 01 March 1970
...., “advertise,”
“presently,” “expected,” “merely”-the Elizabethan meanings of which are
familiar to anyone who has read at all in the literature of the time? How
else account for such simplicities as the following: “Nashe was a mad, wild
wit, and his Unfortunate Traveller is a strange work indeed” (p...
Journal Article
Shakespeare's Festive Comedy: A Study of Dramatic Form and Its Relation Ot Social Custom
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1960) 21 (3): 262–264.
Published: 01 September 1960
... 263
unrepentant in their praise of folly, there are constant reminders in Nash’s
pageant of “the darkening prospect of plague and winter toward which the year
was turning.” This “two-sidedness,” says Barber, “anticipates Shakespeare’s
way of simultaneously exhibiting revel...
Journal Article
The Character of Hamlet and Other Essays
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1942) 3 (1): 125–126.
Published: 01 March 1942
...” (in
Nashes Lenten Stufe, 1599), partly because it is possibly the earliest
mention in English literature of this group (discovered by Mendana
in 1568, and made known to Richard Hakluyt the Elder by Henry
Hawk in 1572), and partly because it rounds off so happily the
most eloquent piece...
Journal Article
On the Literary Genetics of Shakspere's Plays, 1592–1594
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1962) 23 (4): 400–401.
Published: 01 December 1962
... to recent scholarship on Nashe has not been fully acknowledged.
A case in point is his discussion of neUnfortunate Traveller (p. 168) : Hibbard
shows that he knows and uses this reviewer’s article on Nashe and Shakespeare
(MLN, LXVI [ 19511, 480-81) which he credits with absolute silence...
Journal Article
The House of Death: Messages from the English Renaissance.
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1987) 48 (2): 190–192.
Published: 01 June 1987
... practice of extraordinary subtlety and alertness; I think Stein is
DAVID LEE MILLER 191
simply the best commentator in the field. The House ofDeath ranges over texts
by Nashe, Raleigh, Donne (prose as well as verse), Shakespeare, Herbert,
Jonson...
Journal Article
Unpathed Waters, Studies in the Influence of the Voyagers on Elizabethan Literature
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1942) 3 (1): 123–125.
Published: 01 March 1942
... 125
should not pass by “from Salomon Ilands to S. Magnus corner” (in
Nashes Lenten Stufe, 1599), partly because it is possibly the earliest
mention in English literature of this group (discovered by Mendana
in 1568, and made known to Richard Hakluyt the Elder by Henry
Hawk in 1572...
Journal Article
“The End. Yours Truly, Huck Finn” Postscript
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1963) 24 (3): 253–256.
Published: 01 September 1963
...
-which included the right to rent their lands for grazing. The story
(one of confusion, broken promises, and violence-all in the name of
“civilization”) moved toward its resolution in 1889, when the gov-
2Henry Nash Smith (Mark Twain: The Development of a Writer [Cam-
bridge, 19621, pp. 134...
Journal Article
Robert Greene’s Ghosts
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (2016) 77 (2): 193–217.
Published: 01 June 2016
... 2012 . 7 Although Chettle’s and Riche’s pamphlets, along with Thomas Nashe’s Pierce Penilesse , are occasionally cited as evidence of an Elizabethan interest in Lucianic netherworld dialogues, Greene’s presence in each (Nashe mentions him as well) suggests that the trend was inspired more...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Ethos, Poetics, and the Literary Public Sphere
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (2008) 69 (2): 221–243.
Published: 01 June 2008
...
overdetermined responses, since they were commissioned by the aggra-
vated Elizabethan state) focused on Martin’s anonymity. Thomas Nashe
characterized his anonymity as a cover for a bestial, heretical Machia-
vel, while Lyly saw vulgarity, bastardy, bestiality, and knavery behind his
disguise: “Martin...
Journal Article
Books Received
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1977) 38 (1): 113–117.
Published: 01 March 1977
.... 160 pp. $7.50.
Lafay, Henri (editor). Abraham de Vermeil: Potsies. Geneva: Droz, Textes Lit-
tCraires Franpis, 229, 1976‘. xxiii + 187 pp. Fr. s. 30.
Nash, Jerry C. Maurice Sctvg: Concordance de la “Dtlie.” Two volumes. Chapel Hill:
University of North Caroljna Department of Romance...
Journal Article
The Afterlife of Reproductive Slavery: Biocapitalism and Black Feminism’s Philosophy of History
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (2021) 82 (2): 268–270.
Published: 01 June 2021
...Jennifer C. Nash [email protected] The Afterlife of Reproductive Slavery: Biocapitalism and Black Feminism’s Philosophy of History . By Alys Eve Weinbaum . Durham, NC : Duke University Press , 2019 . ix + 286 pp. Copyright © 2021 by University of Washington 2021...
Journal Article
The Modern Study of Renaissance English Literature: A Critical Survey
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1965) 26 (1): 150–183.
Published: 01 March 1965
... variety,
there is a coherence in sixteenthcentury poetry that reveals common
assumptions about “why and how” a poet Harvey may scorn
Nashe’s apparent rejection of “excellentest artificiality,” but it is
Nashe who remarks that “there is no such discredit of art as an ignor-
ant artificer...
Journal Article
The Growth and Structure of Elizabeth Comedy
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1958) 19 (1): 75–76.
Published: 01 March 1958
... of Peele, Greene, and Nashe. Shake-
speare first tried and then rejected “the learned formula of farcical imbroglio
for a more complex plan based on the medieval narrative tradition, as modified
by his own dramatic sense” (p. 78). The maturing of his comic art lay basically...
Journal Article
The Dramatic Unity of “Huckleberry Finn”
Available to Purchase
Modern Language Quarterly (1977) 38 (2): 206–207.
Published: 01 June 1977
... still generate new,
perceptive commentary. Kesponding to critics who reached the territory
ahead of him, Carrington touches on the statements that have most influ-
enced the way we read the novel-those of Bernard DeVoto, Henry Nash
Smith, Leo Marx, and others (but not, inexplicably, James R/1...
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