Sir Thomas Wyatt and the Rhetoric of Rewriting
'Turning the Word'
Series: Oxford English Monographs;
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 15 March 2012
- ISBN 9780199644407
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages276 pages
- Size 221x146x21 mm
- Weight 476 g
- Language English
- Illustrations Frontispiece; five black-and-white halftones 0
Categories
Short description:
This study reappraises Sir Thomas Wyatt (c.1504-1542) as a poetic innovator. It discusses Wyatt's reflections on the writing process, and his awareness of how words can be turned in new directions - that is, rewritten, amended, transformed, manipulated, even performed - over the course of a text's production, transmission, and reception.
MoreLong description:
Chris Stamatakis reappraises Sir Thomas Wyatt (c.1504-1542) as a poetic innovator from the literary avant-garde of early Tudor England. He discusses Wyatt's reflections on the writing process, and his awareness of how words can be turned in new directions - that is, rewritten, amended, transformed, manipulated, even performed - over the course of a text's production, transmission, and reception. Where previous studies have read Wyatt's poetry from a largely biographical standpoint, this book examines the reading practices of his Tudor audiences and editors, and it considers the different types of textuality shown by the manuscript collections that contain his verse. By setting Wyatt's writings in the context of sixteenth-century theories of language and literary practice, and by drawing on early Tudor educational, rhetorical, and courtierly handbooks, Stamatakis examines the rhetoric of rewriting that colours Wyatt's texts. Repeatedly, his writings invite readers to 'turn' or perform the word-to draw out something that lies inert within it. These habits of rewriting and verbal performance often serve to sustain an intimate dialogue between writers and readers in this literary culture. The book pays particular attention to the fascinating materiality of Wyatt's texts: the margins around, and the interlinear spaces within, his poems are regularly filled with new text-handwritten scrawls that are supplied by Wyatt himself or by his copyists, editors and readers. Chapters are devoted to the types of rewriting found in each of Wyatt's main genres: Plutarchian essays; forensic apologias; psalm paraphrases; letters and verse epistles, and lyrics or 'balets'. Two appendices offer further detail about patterns of manuscript transmission and the copying of Wyatt's poems. Sir Thomas Wyatt and the Rhetoric of Rewriting argues that reading often shaded into writing (and rewriting) in the early sixteenth century, and it shows how acts of apparent copying often transformed texts inventively and imaginatively.
this volumes provides a helpful introduction to the art, science, and literature of the Netherlands in the seventeenth century. Its interdisciplinary approach will enrich readers' understanding of Dutch culture, especially since in this day of specialization it is too easy to forget that human life is tapestry of many threads.
Table of Contents:
Abbreviations
Note on transcription
List of Illustrations
Prologue - What's in a Name?
Torne the worde - Literary Practice in the Early Sixteenth Century
This word redeme - Redemptive Paraphrase in the Penitential Psalms
For your forder aduertisement - Performative Rescription in Wyatt's Letters and Verse Epistles
Pastyme with good companye - Balets and Answer-words
Epilogue - Continuell chaunge
Appendix 1 - Conspectus of Manuscripts
Appendix 2 - Table: Poems common to Egerton and other principal witnesses
Select Bibliography