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The Making and Meaning of Books in Renaissance England

ENGL 234.401
also offered as: HIST 411
instructor(s):
MW 3:30-5
Benn 16

This course will focus upon the Bible, Shakespeare, Donne, and Herbert to explore the practices of reading and writing in Medieval and Renaissance England. We will examine what poets, playwrights and translators actually did when they sat down to write (including the sources that they drew upon), how their texts were disseminated in manuscript and print, and how their writing was reshaped by publishers, printers, and readers in the Renaissance and later. The primary texts for the course will be the Bible, Shakespeare’s Richard II, Hamlet, King Lear, the poetry of John Donne and George Herbert, and the New-England Primer. The seminar will make full use of the rare book collections both at Penn and at other Philadelphia libraries, as well as a wide range of web resources.

fulfills requirements
Sector 1: Theory and Poetics of the Standard Major
Sector 3: Early Literature to 1660 of the Standard Major