Literature, Gender and Politics During the English Civil War

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Cambridge University Press, 14.07.2005 - 300 Seiten
In this innovative study, Diane Purkiss illuminates the role of gender in the English Civil War by focusing on ideas of masculinity, rather than on the role of women, which has hitherto received more attention. Historians have tended to emphasise a model of human action in the Civil War based on the idea of the human self as rational animal. Purkiss reveals the irrational ideological forces governing the way seventeenth-century writers understood the state, the monarchy, the battlefield and the epic hero in relation to contested contemporary ideas of masculinity. She analyses the writings of Marvell, Waller, Herrick and the Caroline elegists, as well as in newsbooks and pamphlets, and pays particular attention to Milton's complex responses to the dilemmas of male identity. This study will appeal to scholars of seventeenth-century literature as well as those working in intellectual history and the history of gender.
 

Inhalt

Acknowledgements page
1
and male identity
32
Republican politics
52
Opening the kings cabinet
71
Charles I
98
Cromwell
131
Monsters and men
163
Milton and monsters
186
Matthew Hopkins and the panic about witches
210
Conclusion
229
Index
289
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