Self-referential rhetoric: the evolution of the Elizabethan 'wit'
<p>The thesis traces the evolving attitudes towards rhetoric in the highly-rhetorised English-language prose of the late sixteenth century by focusing on a term that was itself subject to significant change: ‘wit’. To wit’s pre-existing denotations of intellectual acumen, capacity for reason a...
Auteur principal: | Kramer, Y |
---|---|
Autres auteurs: | Burrow, C |
Format: | Thèse |
Langue: | English |
Publié: |
2017
|
Sujets: |
Documents similaires
-
Performing the Arthurian legend in late Elizabethan and early Jacobean England c. 1575-1610
par: Brown, F
Publié: (2022) -
'Witness William Strode': manuscript contexts, circulation and reception
par: Seddon, C
Publié: (2016) -
Prophetic rhetoric in the early Stuart period
par: Jennings, E
Publié: (2015) -
Elizabethan poetry in manuscript: an edition of British Library Harley MS 7392(2)
Publié: (2022) -
Rhetorical Mixture: Hermogenes and Hybridity in English Renaissance Literary Criticism
par: Javiera Lorenzini Raty
Publié: (2023-06-01)