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Spenserian Indirect Satire: Explorations Of A Tradition (Forthcoming), Rachel Hile
Spenserian Indirect Satire: Explorations Of A Tradition (Forthcoming), Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
Kar Ve Arametni İspanyol Trajedisi [Turkish Translation Of “The Spanish Tragedy As Intertext For Orhan Pamuk’S Kar (Snow)”], Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
Characterization In The Faerie Queene, Rachel Hile
Characterization In The Faerie Queene, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
The Limitations Of Concord In The Thames-Medway Marriage Canto Of The Faerie Queene, Rachel Hile
The Limitations Of Concord In The Thames-Medway Marriage Canto Of The Faerie Queene, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
“The Politics Of Satire And The Burning Of Middleton’S Micro-Cynicon (1599)”, Rachel Hile
“The Politics Of Satire And The Burning Of Middleton’S Micro-Cynicon (1599)”, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
Louis Du Guernier's Illustrations For The John Hughes Edition Of The Works Of Mr. Edmund Spenser (1715), Rachel Hile
Louis Du Guernier's Illustrations For The John Hughes Edition Of The Works Of Mr. Edmund Spenser (1715), Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
Edmund Spenser And Auto/Biographical Fantasies Of Social Status, Rachel Hile
Edmund Spenser And Auto/Biographical Fantasies Of Social Status, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
“Joseph Hall's Virgidemiarum And The Anxiety Of Spenser's Satiric Influence”, Rachel Hile
“Joseph Hall's Virgidemiarum And The Anxiety Of Spenser's Satiric Influence”, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
“Michael Drayton’S Spenserianism In The Owle (1604): The Poetics Of Nostalgia”, Rachel Hile
“Michael Drayton’S Spenserianism In The Owle (1604): The Poetics Of Nostalgia”, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
Disability And The Characterization Of Katherine In The Taming Of The Shrew, Rachel Hile
Disability And The Characterization Of Katherine In The Taming Of The Shrew, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
“Spenser’S Satiric Influence On Middleton’S Father Hubburds Tales”, Rachel Hile
“Spenser’S Satiric Influence On Middleton’S Father Hubburds Tales”, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
The Spanish Tragedy As Intertext For Orhan Pamuk's Snow (Kar, 2002), Rachel Hile
The Spanish Tragedy As Intertext For Orhan Pamuk's Snow (Kar, 2002), Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
Hunting Love And Catching Cupid In Spenser’S ‘March’ And Nashe’S Choise Of Valentines, Rachel Hile
Hunting Love And Catching Cupid In Spenser’S ‘March’ And Nashe’S Choise Of Valentines, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
Disabling Allegories In Edmund Spenser’S Faerie Queene, Rachel Hile
Disabling Allegories In Edmund Spenser’S Faerie Queene, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
“He . . . Beat His Blubbred Face": Reading Spenser’S Daphnaida As A Satire”, Rachel Hile
“He . . . Beat His Blubbred Face": Reading Spenser’S Daphnaida As A Satire”, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
Spenserianism And Satire Before And After The Bishops’ Ban: Evidence From Thomas Middleton, Rachel Hile
Spenserianism And Satire Before And After The Bishops’ Ban: Evidence From Thomas Middleton, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
Satirizing The Quean: Venus As Elizabeth In Spenser’S Muiopotmos And Dymoke’S Caltha Poetarum, Rachel Hile
Satirizing The Quean: Venus As Elizabeth In Spenser’S Muiopotmos And Dymoke’S Caltha Poetarum, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.
The Spanish Tragedy As Intertext For Orhan Pamuk's Kar (Snow), Rachel Hile
The Spanish Tragedy As Intertext For Orhan Pamuk's Kar (Snow), Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
In Kar (2002; English version Snow, 2004), Orhan Pamuk uses the genre of early modern English revenge tragedy, specifically Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy, to emphasize the theme of revenge and to illuminate his ideas about women's agency within Islamic culture. Through his departures from the generic expectations of revenge tragedy, Pamuk conveys a sense of the moral complexity of the many acts of revenge in the novel. In another important alteration of this intertext, during the play-within-the-novel performance of The Spanish Tragedy, Kadife, who plays the Bel-imperia role, goes “off script” by not committing suicide on …
Hamlet's Debt To Spenser's Mother Hubberds Tale: A Satire On Robert Cecil?, Rachel Hile
Hamlet's Debt To Spenser's Mother Hubberds Tale: A Satire On Robert Cecil?, Rachel Hile
Rachel E. Hile
No abstract provided.