
Rhetoric and Courtliness in Early Modern Literature
Cambridge University Press, 5/22/2003
EAN 9780521824705, ISBN10: 0521824702
Hardcover, 220 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English
Rhetoric and Courtliness in Early Modern Literature explores the early modern interest in conversation as a newly identified art. Conversation was widely accepted to have been inspired by the republican philosopher Cicero. Recognizing his influence on courtesy literature - the main source for 'civil conversation' - Jennifer Richards uncovers alternative ways of thinking about humanism as a project of linguistic and social reform. She argues that humanists explored styles of conversation to reform the manner of association between male associates; teachers and students, buyers and sellers, and settlers and colonial others. They reconsidered the meaning of 'honesty' in social interchange in an attempt to represent the tension between self-interest and social duty. Richards explores the interest in civil conversation among mid-Tudor humanists, John Cheke, Thomas Smith and Roger Ascham, as well as their self-styled successors, Gabriel Harvey and Edmund Spenser.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Types of honesty
civil and domestical conversation
2. From rhetoric to conversation
reading for Cicero in The Book of the Courtier
3. Honest rivalries
Tudor humanism and linguistic and social reform
4. Honest speakers
sociable commerce and civil conversation
5. A commonwealth of letters
Harvey and Spenser in dialogue
6. A new poet, a new social economy
homosociality and The Shepheardes Calender
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index.