Description

Book Synopsis

European Erotic Romance examines the Renaissance publication and translation of the ancient Greek erotic romances, and English adaptations of the genre by Sir Philip Sidney, Shakespeare and Lady Mary Sidney Wroth.
Providing fresh insight into the development of the novel, this study identifies the politicisation of erotic romance by the European philhellene (lovers of all things Greek) Protestant movement. To English translators and authors, the complex plots, well developed moralised characters (particularly female) and rhetorical styles of the ancient novels signify political and social reform.

Generous quotation and translations ensure that European Erotic Romance is accessible to a broad spectrum of readers. Its organisation lends itself to use as a course text. It is suitable for use by senior undergraduates and specialists in Renaissance literature, translation, rhetoric and history.



Trade Review
The attention paid to the initial reception of Greek romance across Renaissance Europe is unparalleled. This wide-ranging and engaging study will prove especially useful for those interested in the transmission and translation of Greco-Roman texts. -- .

Table of Contents

Introduction
Part One: Greco-Roman Romance in the Renaissance
1 The Nature of Erotic Romance
Greco-Roman Romance of the Second Sophistic and the Renaissance
Aphthonius, Philostratus, Ecphrasis and Artistic Style
Characterisation: Theophrastus and Plutarch
Philhellenism and the Allegorical Politicisation of Erotic Romance
2 Longus’s Daphnis and Chloe
The Novel as Ecphrasis
Amyot, Translation and the Kings of France
Reading, Education and Translation
Translating Erotic Romance
Angel Day, The Shepheards Holidaie and Accession Day, 1587
The Shepheards Holidaie, Court Drama, and Court Poets
Translating Eros: Amyot, Day and Thornley
George Thornley’s Itch
Angel Day and Dionysophanes’ Garden
The End: Nothing But Shepherds’ Games
Conclusion
3 Achilles Tatius’s Leukippe and Kleitophon
Rhetorics of Love
European Dissemination
Belleforest’s French
Burton and the English Philhellenes
Hodges, Erotic Arousal and Sidney’s Arcadia
Translating the Opening
Europa: An Ecphrasis
Europa and Apparent Cyclic Form
Kleitophon and Characterisation
Kleitophon’s Symbolic Dream
Kleinias on Love, Sex and Marriage
Kleitophon’s Garden
Pantheia’s Dream
Debate on Erotic Love
Sexual Predation
Melite and Thersandros
The Trial and Conclusion
Conclusion
4 Heliodorus’s An Ethiopian Story - Theagenes and Charikleia
Charikliea: Royal Foundling
Renaissance Continental Translations and Philhellene Politics
Sandford’s Historie of Chariclia and Theagenes
Underdowne’s An Aethiopian Historie
Fraunce, L’Isle and Gough
Exemplary Characters and Moral Lessons
Heliodorus’s Political Romance
Homeric Beginnings
The Insatiable Demainete
Thyamis’s Erotic Dream
Thyamis’s Priestly Family
Rhodopis: Kalasiris’s Nightmare
Heliodorus’s Cyclic Tales
Leadership and the Law
Thyamis Justified
The Wanton Arsake
The Wicked Kybele
Recognising Charikleia
Language and Nationalism
L’Isle's Political Panegyric
Conclusion
Part Two: Philhellene Erotic Romance
5 National Romance and Sidney’s Arcadia
Political Outlines
Selective Monarchomachia
Evolution of Arcadia
Unfolding the Epic Cycle
Sub-Plot and Exemplary Character
Philisides and Tiltyard Masquing
Costume, Device, and Narrative Strategy
Philoclea’s Bed
Eroticising Renaissance Romance
Erotic Romance and Erotic Sex
Interest Theory, Philhellene Politics, and Erotic Romance
The Novel as Theatre
Legal and Political Process as Drama
The End of Romance
Conclusion
6 Shakespeare and Philhellene Erotic Romance
Shakespeare, Amyot and North’s Plutarch
Amyot-North Diction and Style in Coriolanus (1608)
Julius Caesar (1599), Political Identifiers and the Rhetorics of Erotic Romance
Antony, Cleopatra, Octavius and the Huguenots
Greville’s Antony and Cleopatra: Politics and Anti-Romance
Panegyric in Antony and Cleopatra (1606): the Rewards of Patronage
The Winter’s Tale (1609-10): Exemplary Rapprochement
Jealousy, Tyranny, and the Aggressive ‘Royal’ Style
Gendering Rhetorics: Thucydides and the Ermine
Erotic Closure
Cymbeline (1609-10), Rhetorical Style and the Catholic Disjunction
Conclusion
7 Mary Sidney Wroth’s Urania
Philhellene Protestant Erotic Propaganda
Disjunction at the Throne of Love
A French Story
The Dispossessed: Urania’s Misery
Theatres of Romance
Interest Theory Personalised
Techniques of Elision
Allegorical Parallelism
Urania as Anti-Romance
The Great Cham and His Dynasty
Urania as Roman à Clef
The Metamorphosis of Mary Sidney Herbert
Truth and Illusion
Rodomandro’s Masque
Female Abuse and Martyrdom
Hereditary Succession and Restoration
Liberation, Restoration and Marital Union
Meriana and the Macedonian Succession
Romania Allegorised
Closing the Sophistic Circle
Urania as Sophistic Erotic Romance
Conclusion
Chapter 8
The Fate of a Genre
The Semiotics of Erotic Romance
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index of Place-Names
General Index

European Erotic Romance

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    A Hardback by Victor Skretkowicz

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      View other formats and editions of European Erotic Romance by Victor Skretkowicz

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 7/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719079702, 978-0719079702
      ISBN10: 0719079705

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      European Erotic Romance examines the Renaissance publication and translation of the ancient Greek erotic romances, and English adaptations of the genre by Sir Philip Sidney, Shakespeare and Lady Mary Sidney Wroth.
      Providing fresh insight into the development of the novel, this study identifies the politicisation of erotic romance by the European philhellene (lovers of all things Greek) Protestant movement. To English translators and authors, the complex plots, well developed moralised characters (particularly female) and rhetorical styles of the ancient novels signify political and social reform.

      Generous quotation and translations ensure that European Erotic Romance is accessible to a broad spectrum of readers. Its organisation lends itself to use as a course text. It is suitable for use by senior undergraduates and specialists in Renaissance literature, translation, rhetoric and history.



      Trade Review
      The attention paid to the initial reception of Greek romance across Renaissance Europe is unparalleled. This wide-ranging and engaging study will prove especially useful for those interested in the transmission and translation of Greco-Roman texts. -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      Part One: Greco-Roman Romance in the Renaissance
      1 The Nature of Erotic Romance
      Greco-Roman Romance of the Second Sophistic and the Renaissance
      Aphthonius, Philostratus, Ecphrasis and Artistic Style
      Characterisation: Theophrastus and Plutarch
      Philhellenism and the Allegorical Politicisation of Erotic Romance
      2 Longus’s Daphnis and Chloe
      The Novel as Ecphrasis
      Amyot, Translation and the Kings of France
      Reading, Education and Translation
      Translating Erotic Romance
      Angel Day, The Shepheards Holidaie and Accession Day, 1587
      The Shepheards Holidaie, Court Drama, and Court Poets
      Translating Eros: Amyot, Day and Thornley
      George Thornley’s Itch
      Angel Day and Dionysophanes’ Garden
      The End: Nothing But Shepherds’ Games
      Conclusion
      3 Achilles Tatius’s Leukippe and Kleitophon
      Rhetorics of Love
      European Dissemination
      Belleforest’s French
      Burton and the English Philhellenes
      Hodges, Erotic Arousal and Sidney’s Arcadia
      Translating the Opening
      Europa: An Ecphrasis
      Europa and Apparent Cyclic Form
      Kleitophon and Characterisation
      Kleitophon’s Symbolic Dream
      Kleinias on Love, Sex and Marriage
      Kleitophon’s Garden
      Pantheia’s Dream
      Debate on Erotic Love
      Sexual Predation
      Melite and Thersandros
      The Trial and Conclusion
      Conclusion
      4 Heliodorus’s An Ethiopian Story - Theagenes and Charikleia
      Charikliea: Royal Foundling
      Renaissance Continental Translations and Philhellene Politics
      Sandford’s Historie of Chariclia and Theagenes
      Underdowne’s An Aethiopian Historie
      Fraunce, L’Isle and Gough
      Exemplary Characters and Moral Lessons
      Heliodorus’s Political Romance
      Homeric Beginnings
      The Insatiable Demainete
      Thyamis’s Erotic Dream
      Thyamis’s Priestly Family
      Rhodopis: Kalasiris’s Nightmare
      Heliodorus’s Cyclic Tales
      Leadership and the Law
      Thyamis Justified
      The Wanton Arsake
      The Wicked Kybele
      Recognising Charikleia
      Language and Nationalism
      L’Isle's Political Panegyric
      Conclusion
      Part Two: Philhellene Erotic Romance
      5 National Romance and Sidney’s Arcadia
      Political Outlines
      Selective Monarchomachia
      Evolution of Arcadia
      Unfolding the Epic Cycle
      Sub-Plot and Exemplary Character
      Philisides and Tiltyard Masquing
      Costume, Device, and Narrative Strategy
      Philoclea’s Bed
      Eroticising Renaissance Romance
      Erotic Romance and Erotic Sex
      Interest Theory, Philhellene Politics, and Erotic Romance
      The Novel as Theatre
      Legal and Political Process as Drama
      The End of Romance
      Conclusion
      6 Shakespeare and Philhellene Erotic Romance
      Shakespeare, Amyot and North’s Plutarch
      Amyot-North Diction and Style in Coriolanus (1608)
      Julius Caesar (1599), Political Identifiers and the Rhetorics of Erotic Romance
      Antony, Cleopatra, Octavius and the Huguenots
      Greville’s Antony and Cleopatra: Politics and Anti-Romance
      Panegyric in Antony and Cleopatra (1606): the Rewards of Patronage
      The Winter’s Tale (1609-10): Exemplary Rapprochement
      Jealousy, Tyranny, and the Aggressive ‘Royal’ Style
      Gendering Rhetorics: Thucydides and the Ermine
      Erotic Closure
      Cymbeline (1609-10), Rhetorical Style and the Catholic Disjunction
      Conclusion
      7 Mary Sidney Wroth’s Urania
      Philhellene Protestant Erotic Propaganda
      Disjunction at the Throne of Love
      A French Story
      The Dispossessed: Urania’s Misery
      Theatres of Romance
      Interest Theory Personalised
      Techniques of Elision
      Allegorical Parallelism
      Urania as Anti-Romance
      The Great Cham and His Dynasty
      Urania as Roman à Clef
      The Metamorphosis of Mary Sidney Herbert
      Truth and Illusion
      Rodomandro’s Masque
      Female Abuse and Martyrdom
      Hereditary Succession and Restoration
      Liberation, Restoration and Marital Union
      Meriana and the Macedonian Succession
      Romania Allegorised
      Closing the Sophistic Circle
      Urania as Sophistic Erotic Romance
      Conclusion
      Chapter 8
      The Fate of a Genre
      The Semiotics of Erotic Romance
      Conclusion
      Bibliography
      Index of Place-Names
      General Index

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