Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- General Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Spenser, Marlowe, Shakespeare: Methodological Investigations
- Beyond Binarism: Eros/Death and Venus/Mars in Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra and Spenser’s Faerie Queene
- Spenser and Shakespeare: Polarized Approaches to Psychology, Poetics, and Patronage
- Perdita, Pastorella, and the Romance of Literary Form: Shakespeare’s Counter-Spenserian Authorship
- Pastoral Forms and Religious Reform in Spenser and Shakespeare
- The Equinoctial Boar: Venus and Adonis in Spenser’s Garden, Shakespeare’s Epyllion, and Richard III’s England
- Hamlet’s Debt to Spenser’s Mother Hubberds Tale: A Satire on Robert Cecil?
- Fusion: Spenserian Metaphor and Sidnean Example in Shakespeare’s King Lear
- What Means a Knight? Red Cross Knight and Edgar
- The Seven Deadly Sins and Shakespeare’s Jacobean Tragedies
- Works Cited
- Bibliography of Books and Papers on Spenser and Shakespeare
- Index
Title Pages
Title Pages
- Source:
- Shakespeare and Spenser
- Publisher:
- Manchester University Press
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- Title Pages
- General Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Spenser, Marlowe, Shakespeare: Methodological Investigations
- Beyond Binarism: Eros/Death and Venus/Mars in Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra and Spenser’s Faerie Queene
- Spenser and Shakespeare: Polarized Approaches to Psychology, Poetics, and Patronage
- Perdita, Pastorella, and the Romance of Literary Form: Shakespeare’s Counter-Spenserian Authorship
- Pastoral Forms and Religious Reform in Spenser and Shakespeare
- The Equinoctial Boar: Venus and Adonis in Spenser’s Garden, Shakespeare’s Epyllion, and Richard III’s England
- Hamlet’s Debt to Spenser’s Mother Hubberds Tale: A Satire on Robert Cecil?
- Fusion: Spenserian Metaphor and Sidnean Example in Shakespeare’s King Lear
- What Means a Knight? Red Cross Knight and Edgar
- The Seven Deadly Sins and Shakespeare’s Jacobean Tragedies
- Works Cited
- Bibliography of Books and Papers on Spenser and Shakespeare
- Index