Spenser at Play
Reading The Faerie Queene is like playing. This article develops an account of three relevant tendencies of play—to change through time, to animate its object, and to remain opaque in meaning—and distinguishes this account from other critical understandings of play. It then introduces a historical a...
Main Author: | Moshenska, J |
---|---|
Format: | Journal article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Modern Language Association
2019
|
Similar Items
-
Edmund Spenser and the spatiality of allegory
by: Cornish, A
Published: (2020) -
Spenser's poetics of corporeality and its influence on Milton
by: Rao, N
Published: (2019) -
Elijah Fenton's copy of Spenser's works (1679)
by: Burrow, C
Published: (2022) -
Spenser as maker: reinventing the English lexicon in The Shepheardes Calender
by: Crover, S
Published: (2010) -
Patronage, gentility, and “base degree”: Edmund Spenser and Lord Burghley
by: McCabe, R
Published: (2017)