Publications: Toutes

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  1. Review of A “Compromisso” for the Future: 500th Anniversary of the First Printed Edition of the Compromisso of the Confraternity of the Misericórdia
  2. Review of Tropologies: Ethics and Invention in England, c. 1350–1600
  3. Review of Moral Combat: Women, Gender, and War in Italian Renaissance Literature
  4. Review of Janus Cornarius et la redécouverte d’Hippocrate à la Renaissance
  5. Review of Dialogus de adoratione

    Review of Dialogus de adoratione

    Review | Contributeur(s): Matteo Soranzo

  6. Review of Space, Place, and Motion: Locating Confraternities in the Late Medieval and Early Modern City
  7. Review of The Reformation and the Right Reading of Scripture

    Review of The Reformation and the Right Reading of Scripture

    Review | Contributeur(s): Dennis Ngien

  8. Review of Reading Galileo: Scribal Technologies and the Two New Sciences
  9. Review of Measured Words: Computation and Writing in Renaissance Italy
  10. Review of Members of His Body: Shakespeare, Paul, and a Theology of Nonmonogamy; Shakespeare as a Way of Life: Skeptical Practice and the Politics of Weakness
  11. Review of Recipes for Thought: Knowledge and Taste in the Early Modern English Kitchen
  12. Review of Figure di donne in età moderna. Modelli e storie

    Review of Figure di donne in età moderna. Modelli e storie

    Review | Contributeur(s): Mattia Zangari

  13. Review of Shadow and Substance: Eucharistic Controversy and English Drama across the Reformation Divide
  14. Editor’s Note

    Editor’s Note

    Article | Contributeur(s): William R. Bowen

  15. “My Own Worst Enemy”: Translating Hamartia in Sixteenth-Century Italy

    “My Own Worst Enemy”: Translating Hamartia in Sixteenth-Century Italy

    Article | Contributeur(s): Bryan Brazeau

    This article considers the ways in which Aristotle’s notion of hamartia (ἁμαρτία) in the Poetics—the tragic fault that leads to the protagonist’s downfall—was rendered in sixteenth-century translations and commentaries produced in Italy. While early Latin translations and commentaries initially...

  16. L’Inquiétante tradition de La Strega de Lasca. Variantes d’auteur ou réécriture éditoriale ?

    L’Inquiétante tradition de La Strega de Lasca. Variantes d’auteur ou réécriture éditoriale ?

    Article | Contributeur(s): Michel Plaisance

    In the 1976 edition of Anton Francesco Grazzini’s La Strega, the author of this article found reason to suspect the textual differences between the Magl. VII 1385 autograph version and the 1582 editions published by the Giunti of Venise in 12° and in 8°. M. Durante has since sought to...

  17. Exploring Verbal Relations between Arden of Faversham and John Lyly’s Endymion

    Exploring Verbal Relations between Arden of Faversham and John Lyly’s Endymion

    Article | Contributeur(s): Darren Freebury-Jones

    Several scholars, utilizing traditional reading-based methods, have highlighted intertextual links between the anonymous domestic tragedy Arden of Faversham (1590) and John Lyly’s comedy Endymion, The Man in the Moon (1588). The authorship of Arden of Faversham is fiercely contested: Brian...

  18. Hurried to Destruction: Reprobation in Arden of Faversham and A Woman Killed with Kindness

    Hurried to Destruction: Reprobation in Arden of Faversham and A Woman Killed with Kindness

    Article | Contributeur(s): Glenn Clark

    This essay demonstrates that Arden of Faversham and A Woman Killed with Kindness explore important tensions in the Elizabethan understanding of the lived experience of the damned. Calvinist theologians tended to describe reprobation in terms that unintentionally suggested direct divine agency and...

  19. “A Virgine and a Martyr both”: The Turn to Hagiography in Heywood’s Reformation History Play

    “A Virgine and a Martyr both”: The Turn to Hagiography in Heywood’s Reformation History Play

    Article | Contributeur(s): Gina M. Di Salvo

    This article considers the narrative and theatrical strategies used by Thomas Heywood to sanctify Elizabeth I as a virgin martyr saint in the remarkable, yet understudied, Reformation history play If You Know Not Me, You Know Nobody, Part I, or the Troubles of Queen Elizabeth (ca. 1605). I...

  20. Greengrass, Mark, project dir. The Unabridged Acts and Monuments Online (TAMO)