Privacy/publicity, Love/Lust Flashcards

1
Q

When was Sidney’s ‘Astrophil and Stella’ written?

A

1580s

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2
Q

When was ‘Astrophil and Stella’ first published?

A

1591

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3
Q

Who published the first edition of ‘Astrophil and Stella’?

A

Thomas Newman

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4
Q

What does Sonnet 67 of ‘Astrophil and Stella’ say about love and reading?

A

‘Her eyes’ speech is thus translated’

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5
Q

What does Sonnet 67 of ‘Astrophil and Stella’ say about misreading?

A

‘how so [Hope] interpret the contents, /
I am resolved thy error to maintain, / Rather than by more truth to get more pain.’

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6
Q

When was ‘The Adventures of Master F.J.’ first published?

A

1573

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7
Q

What line in ‘The Adventures of Master F.J.’ shows the way private writings are made public?

A

‘he lost [his poem] where his mistress found it, and she immediately imparted the same unto Dame Pergo, and Dame Pergo unto others…’

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8
Q

What does Gascoigne say he has done to ‘Master F.J.’ in the ‘Posies’ edition?

A

‘cleansed [it] from all uncleanly words’

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9
Q

What does James Daybell say about letter-writing in early modern England?

A

‘letter-writing emerges as a complex (often collaborative rather than solitary) activity’

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10
Q

When was Angel Day’s ‘The English Secretorie’ published?

A

1585

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11
Q

What does H.W. say about publication in the letter to the reader prefixing G.T.’s narration in ‘The Adventures of Master F.J.’?

A

It is a text ‘thought better to please a number by common commodity than to feed the humour of any private person by needless necessity’

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12
Q

What does Gascoigne say he is accused of being in the ‘Prefatory Letters’ to his 1575 ‘Posies’?

A

‘a corrupt Merchant for the sale of deceitful wares’

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13
Q

When was Nicolas Breton’s ‘A Post with a pack of mad letters’ published?

A

1606

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14
Q

What is the value of Breton’s fictional letters, according to his preface?

A

There are ‘some things profitable to a young wit’

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15
Q

How does Breton address his audience in the preface to his ‘Pack of mad letters’?

A

‘Gentle if you be’

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16
Q

Give the name of a letter that demonstrates the entertainment value of letters

A

‘A letter to laugh at’

17
Q

What broader social function do letters have, according to Gary Schneider?

A

‘in-group cohesion’

18
Q

What does Angel Day call the letters in his ‘English Secretorie’?

A

‘example[s]’

19
Q

When was James Howell’s ‘Epistolae Ho-Elianae’ published?

A

1650

20
Q

What line shows a reverse metamorphosis in Marston’s ‘Pigmalion’?

A

‘O that my Mistress were an Image too, / That I might blameless her perfections view.’

21
Q

What line acknowledges the voyeuristic reader in Marston’s ‘Pigmalion’?

A

‘O pardon me / Yee gaping eares that swallow up my lines’

22
Q

What does Marston say in his epigraph to his ‘Mistress’ before ‘Pigmalion’?

A

‘Ile gladly write thy metamorphosis’

23
Q

What complicates the humanist vision, according to Sidney’s ‘Defense of Poesy’?

A

‘infected will’

24
Q

What do epyllia do in terms of moulding the identity of their readers, according to Jim Ellis?

A

‘The epyllion frequently warns youths about the danger of being the object of desire, and seeks to position adult males as autonomous subjects of desire’

25
Q

What line in Marston’s ‘Pigmalion’ figures the reader as an object that the text penetrates?

A

‘Yee gaping ears, / That swallow up my lines’

26
Q

What does Joseph Hall say in book 1, satire 7 about the publicity of amorous sonnets?

A

He writes ‘As tho the staring world hang’d on his sleeve’

27
Q

What does Joseph Hall say about the metamorphosing art of amorous sonnets in book 1, satire 7, seemingly referencing ‘Astrophil and Stella’?

A

‘tho she be some dunghill drudge at home, / Yet can he her resign some refuse room / Amid the well-known stars’

28
Q

In which sonnet is Stella referred to as ‘Queen Virtue’s court’?

A

Sonnet 9

29
Q

In which sonnet are ‘Stella’’s breasts compared to tents?

A

29

30
Q

What does Thomas Newman say about the other illicit transcriptions of ‘Astrophil and Stella’?

A

‘it had gathered much corruption by ill Writers’

31
Q

What does Thomas Newman say about the value of printing ‘Astrophil and Stella’?

A

‘I thought it pittie anie thing proceeding from so rare a man, shoulde bee obscured’

32
Q

What does Nashe refer to a print readership as for Sidney’s text?

A

‘this Theater of pleasure… an artificial heav’n to overshadow the faire frame’

33
Q

What does Nashe say about private scribal circulation?

A

‘imprisoned in Ladyes casks’

34
Q

What does Nashe say poetic reputation uses to ascend to power?

A

it ‘useth some private penne (in steed of a picklock to procure his violent enlargement.’

35
Q

Which critic argues against viewing Thomas Newman as a pirate?

A

Mark Bland

36
Q

What does Clegg argue about the pseudo-moralizing prefatory materials in Gascoigne’s ‘Flowers’?

A

They ‘draw attention’ to the narrative as ‘sexualized discourse’

37
Q

What does Sidney say writing poetry does in ‘Defense of Poesy’ with regard to world?

A

It creates ‘another nature’

38
Q

What does Sidney say about attempts to attain perfection in the ‘Defense of Poesy’

A

‘our erected wit makes us know what perfection is, and yet our infected will keeps us from reaching unto it.’