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Full Description
This book highlights the stories of women from premodern history and literature through models of adaptations, retellings, and criticism such as poems, plays, and essays. In reviving these voices from the background, it widens the appeal and accessibility of scholarship in the humanities.
Creative composing processes draw research through the imagination and experience of the writer, an act which can help explore qualities of historical events and literary figures that are still relevant today. The four authors of this book demonstrate these approaches through creative adaptations and responses to Biblical and Classical writings, Greek mythological figures, medieval narratives, powerful historical women, plays by Shakespeare, and works by other early modern English writers. What distinguishes this book from other scholarship on the premodern is its collaborative and interdisciplinary foundation, as well as its emphasis on literary and hybrid genres.
Offering interdisciplinary ways of reading, thinking about, and reconceiving literature and scholarship in a way that invites dialogue and further creative responses, this volume provides humanities teachers with effective pedagogical tools to inspire deeper engagement and understanding in their students.
Contents
Introduction Part 1: Classical and Biblical 1. Contemporary Visions of Classical Greek Women 2. Retellings of Greek Mythology 3. Biblical Retellings Part 2: Powerful Medieval Women 4. Catherine of Siena 5. Magic and Medieval Women Part 3: Sixteenth Century English Queens 6. Katherine of Aragon 7. Queen Elizabeth I 's Courtships Part 4: Shakespeare 8. Shakespearean Creative Non-Fiction and Poetry 9. Shakespearean Rags 10. Shakespearean Women Part 5: Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Writers 11. Spenser, Donne and Milton