“To Live Piously and to Help the Needy Poor”: The Consortium of S. Allessandro in Colonna, in Bergamo
Article | Contributor(s): Christopher Carlsmith, Louisa Foroughi
This essay explores the activities of the Italian consortium of S. Alessandro in Colonna in Bergamo, through an analysis and translation of the Regola (Rule) that governed it for nearly five centuries. Written in Latin in 1363–65, and republished in Italian in the late sixteenth century, the...
“To Warn Proud Cities”: a Topical Reference in Milton’s “Airy Knights” Simile (Paradise Lost II.531-8)
Article | Contributor(s): John Leonard
In Paradise Lost II.531-8 modern editors often see an allusion to Josephus’ account of armies appearing in the sky shortly before the fall of Jerusalem. In fact, reports of spectral soldiers and aerial battles were quite common in seventeenth-century English pamphlets, such as Mirabilis Annus and...
“Tous mes livres de langues estrangeres”: Reconstructing the Legatum Scaligeri in Leyden University Library
Article | Contributor(s): Kasper Van Ommen
Josephus Justus Scaliger, né en 1540 à Agen près de Bordeaux, accepta l’invitation de la nouvelle université de Leyde, et s’y installa en 1593 et y exerca comme professeur jusqu’à sa mort en 1609. De sa prise de fonction jusque son trépas, il ne quitta plus Leyde, où il fut enterré et sans cesse...
“Trying to Walk on Logs in Water”: John Donne, Religion, and the Critical Tradition
Article | Contributor(s): Jeanne Shami
Cet article examine la religion de John Donne du point de vue historique ainsi que littéraire, en mettant en valeur ses rapports avec les branches catholique et réformée de l’église anglicane en début de l’époque des Stuart. Ses écrits révèlent les fêlures de cette église et illuminent les...
“Tutti gli occhi del mondo”: Court Networks between Turin and Madrid, 1640–1700
Article | Contributor(s): Blythe Alice Raviola
Although the court of Turin’s role in the new balance of power in Europe during the War of the Spanish Succession is well known, far less is known about the strategic function of its collateral courts, such as the court of the princes of Savoy-Carignano. Based on the correspondence of the Savoy...
“We moved here for the lifestyle”: A picture of entrepreneurship in rural British Columbia
2022-06-13 18:09:52 | Article | Contributor(s): Lynne Siemens | https://doi.org/10.25547/1XTE-8V03
Digital humanities
“What condition will not miserable men accept?”: Hegemonic Masculinity in John Lyly’s Galatea
Article | Contributor(s): Jamie Paris
Studies of gender in John Lyly’s pastoral comedy Galatea (1592) have primarily focused on the queer potential of the female-to-male (FTM) crossdressing plot. While the critical focus on same-sex love and gender fluidity in the play has been evocative, it has understated the importance of...
“Worthy my blood”: Inheritance, Imitation, and Gendered Familial Emotions in John Marston’s Antonio Plays
Article | Contributor(s): Megan Elizabeth Allen
Examining the Antonio plays by John Marston, I argue that the metaphors used to portray familial emotions reveal the ideologies that underpin both excessive and normative versions of familial relationships; these metaphors reveal the pressures placed on family emotions by economic and political...
“Your Best and Maist Faithfull Subjects”: Andrew and James Melville as James VI and I's “Loyal Opposition”
Article | Contributor(s): Stephen King
Bien que moins connue des chercheurs que celle de 1604, la conférence qui eut lieu en 1606 à Hampton Court entre le roi James et ses ecclésiastiques anglais et écossais proéminents produisit néanmoins un effet immédiat sur la pratique monarchique de James Stuart en Angleterre. À la conférence de...
“[T]he fault of the man and not the poet”: Sidney’s Troubled Double Vision of Thomas More’s Utopia
Article | Contributor(s): Daniel T. Lochman
In the Defence of Poesy, Philip Sidney refers puzzlingly to Thomas More and Utopia. He praises the “way” this work presents a commonwealth yet faults the man who produced it. Sidney might have followed religious writers who condemned More’s Catholicism and his use of poetic fictions rather than...
Click a tag to see only publications with that tag.