“The coherence of the text” in sixteenth-century England: Reading literature and law with Abraham Fraunce

Abraham Fraunce has long been recognized as an important participant in the literary culture of the 1580s and 1590s, an early reader and acquaintance of Philip Sidney, Edmund Spenser, and other Elizabethan writers. His own works span a wide range of humanist disciplines and genres, including neo-Lat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hetherington, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: University of North Carolina Press 2018
_version_ 1797089535091277824
author Hetherington, M
author_facet Hetherington, M
author_sort Hetherington, M
collection OXFORD
description Abraham Fraunce has long been recognized as an important participant in the literary culture of the 1580s and 1590s, an early reader and acquaintance of Philip Sidney, Edmund Spenser, and other Elizabethan writers. His own works span a wide range of humanist disciplines and genres, including neo-Latin drama, English quantitative poetry, mythography, emblems, logic, rhetoric, and legal theory. Some of his less literary pursuits, particularly his work in law and Ramist logic, can seem misguided, eccentric, or hard to reconcile with his poetic interests; but this article reads Fraunce's work as an exemplary Elizabethan attempt to coordinate the varied intellectual arenas in which humanistically trained graduates might be expected to perform. Moreover, it argues that central to Fraunce's thinking was the question of coherence—the coherence of his culture, of his professional identity and practice as a lawyer, and of the literary texts he wrote and read. While Fraunce remains the primary focus, the article draws on a wide range of texts, from ancient rhetoric, biblical exegesis, and humanist dialectic, to trace the history and role of this important category of Elizabethan hermeneutic inquiry and literary experience. Fraunce's varied interests and his committed but speculative attempts to understand their affinities offer us a rich sense of the overlapping disciplinary spaces in which questions central to late Elizabethan literary theory and practice were explored.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T03:05:30Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:b25f6a39-eeb2-4ad3-9119-4b13851a13f3
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T03:05:30Z
publishDate 2018
publisher University of North Carolina Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:b25f6a39-eeb2-4ad3-9119-4b13851a13f32022-03-27T04:11:16Z“The coherence of the text” in sixteenth-century England: Reading literature and law with Abraham FraunceJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b25f6a39-eeb2-4ad3-9119-4b13851a13f3EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordUniversity of North Carolina Press2018Hetherington, MAbraham Fraunce has long been recognized as an important participant in the literary culture of the 1580s and 1590s, an early reader and acquaintance of Philip Sidney, Edmund Spenser, and other Elizabethan writers. His own works span a wide range of humanist disciplines and genres, including neo-Latin drama, English quantitative poetry, mythography, emblems, logic, rhetoric, and legal theory. Some of his less literary pursuits, particularly his work in law and Ramist logic, can seem misguided, eccentric, or hard to reconcile with his poetic interests; but this article reads Fraunce's work as an exemplary Elizabethan attempt to coordinate the varied intellectual arenas in which humanistically trained graduates might be expected to perform. Moreover, it argues that central to Fraunce's thinking was the question of coherence—the coherence of his culture, of his professional identity and practice as a lawyer, and of the literary texts he wrote and read. While Fraunce remains the primary focus, the article draws on a wide range of texts, from ancient rhetoric, biblical exegesis, and humanist dialectic, to trace the history and role of this important category of Elizabethan hermeneutic inquiry and literary experience. Fraunce's varied interests and his committed but speculative attempts to understand their affinities offer us a rich sense of the overlapping disciplinary spaces in which questions central to late Elizabethan literary theory and practice were explored.
spellingShingle Hetherington, M
“The coherence of the text” in sixteenth-century England: Reading literature and law with Abraham Fraunce
title “The coherence of the text” in sixteenth-century England: Reading literature and law with Abraham Fraunce
title_full “The coherence of the text” in sixteenth-century England: Reading literature and law with Abraham Fraunce
title_fullStr “The coherence of the text” in sixteenth-century England: Reading literature and law with Abraham Fraunce
title_full_unstemmed “The coherence of the text” in sixteenth-century England: Reading literature and law with Abraham Fraunce
title_short “The coherence of the text” in sixteenth-century England: Reading literature and law with Abraham Fraunce
title_sort the coherence of the text in sixteenth century england reading literature and law with abraham fraunce
work_keys_str_mv AT hetheringtonm thecoherenceofthetextinsixteenthcenturyenglandreadingliteratureandlawwithabrahamfraunce