MARC 主機 00000cam a2201093 i 4500 001 ocn907183951 003 OCoLC 005 20151001093033.0 008 150608s2015 nyua b 001 0deng 010 2015006815 020 9781137534897 020 1137534893 035 (OCoLC)907183951 040 DLC|beng|erda|cDLC|dYDX|dBTCTA|dBDX|dOCLCF|dYDXCP|dCDX |dOCLCO|dNhCcYME 042 pcc 043 e------ 050 00 D107.3|b.S36 2015 090 D107.3|b.S36 2015 245 00 Scholars and poets talk about queens /|cedited by Carole Levin and associate editor, Christine Stewart-Nu©łez. 264 1 New York, NY :|bPalgrave Macmillan,|c2015. 300 xxii, 299 pages ;|c23 cm. 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent. 337 unmediated|bn|2rdamedia. 338 volume|bnc|2rdacarrier. 490 1 Queenship and power. 504 Includes bibliographical references and index. 520 2 "Scholars and Poets Talk About Queens is a lively and erudite collection, unusual in an especially appealing way : not only are there essays about a range of queens and how they were represented in the Middle Ages and Renaissance through primary accounts, chronicles, and literary representations, but the book also contains modern poetry and short plays about these same queens, allowing readers to understand and appreciate them both intellectually and emotionally. Queens include such famous and fascinating women as Hecuba, Cleopatra, the Empress Matilda, Margaret of Anjou, Catherine of Aragon, Mary Stuart, and Queen Elizabeth I, and Grace O'Malley, a pirate queen. One can find, for example, an essay on Mary Stuart's responses to her widowhoods paired with Mary's lamentation from the afterlife. After reading the analysis of the Empress Matilda's efforts to gain the throne of England, one can also see the character of the much older Matilda playing chess with her daughter-in-law Eleanor of Aquitaine"--|cProvided by publisher. 650 0 Queens|xHistory. 650 0 Queens|xHistory|vSources. 650 0 Queens|vBiography. 650 0 World history. 650 0 World history|vSources. 650 0 Middle Ages|vSources. 650 0 Renaissance|vSources. 650 0 Queens|vLiterary collections. 653 Ngọc test 655 7 Biography.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01423686. 655 7 History.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01411628. 655 7 Literary collections.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01423811. 655 7 Sources.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01423900. 700 1 Levin, Carole,|d1948-|eeditor. 700 1 Stewart-Nu©łez, Christine,|eeditor. 830 0 Queenship and power. 907 .b76518358|b04-12-16|c09-29-15 910 RDA ENRICHED 910 ybp 910 Backstage 910 TOC 910 Hathi Trust report SPM 910 BROWNu 953 Việt Nam|b1940 970 01 |tList of Illustrations|pxiii 970 01 |tAcknowledgments|pxv 970 01 |tList of Contributors|pxvii 970 01 |tIntroduction: Talking About Scholars and Poets Talk About Queens|cCarole Levin|fLevin, Carole|p1 970 11 |tHecuba 970 11 |tTears for Hecuba: Empathy and Maternal Bereavement in Golding's Translation of Ovid's Metamorphoses|cMarguerite A. Tassi|fTassi, Marguerite A.|p7 970 11 |tHecuba's Dream|cMarguerite A. Tassi|fTassi, Marguerite A.|p25 970 11 |tHecuba Laments|cDarla Biel|fBiel, Darla|p29 970 11 |tCleopatra 970 11 |t"I was not I?": Tracing the Representations of Cleopatra in English Drama, 1592--1611|cAndrea Nichols|fNichols, Andrea|p33 970 11 |tGrand Unified Theory|cErika Stevens|fStevens, Erika|p51 970 11 |tBoudicca 970 11 |tHow the Iceni Became British: Holinshed's Boudicca and the Rhetoric of Naturalization|cKatarzyna Lecky|fLecky, Katarzyna|p55 970 11 |tThe Queen Iceni Seeks Andraste|cM. Wells|fWells, M.|p75 970 11 |tThe Heart and Stomach of a Queen|cCarole Levin|fLevin, Carole|p77 970 11 |tThe Empress Matilda 970 11 |tThe Virtuous Virago: The Empress Matilda and the Politics of Womanhood in Twelfth-Century England|cCharles Beem|fBeem, Charles|p85 970 11 |tMaude and Ellie Play Chess|cDennis Henry|fHenry, Dennis |p99 970 11 |tQueen Margaret 970 11 |tQueen Margaret in Shakespeare and Chronicles: She-Wolf or Heroic Spirit|cCarole Levin|fLevin, Carole|p111 970 11 |tAfter Lives|cRegina Buccola|fBuccola, Regina|p133 970 11 |tCatherine of Aragon 970 11 |tRegarding Catherine of Aragon|cTheresa Earenfight |fEarenfight, Theresa|p137 970 11 |tOf Books and Bijou: The Poet's Letter to Katherine |cChristine Stewart-Nunez|fStewart-Nunez, Christine|p159 970 11 |tGranadas: Katherine to Her Daughter|cChristine Stewart- Nunez|fStewart-Nunez, Christine|p161 970 11 |tMary Stuart 970 11 |tThe Widow of Scots: Examining Mary Stewart in Her Widowhoods|cAlyson Alvarez|fAlvarez, Alyson|p165 970 11 |tMary Queen of Scots in Hell|cMary Ruth Donnelly|p181 970 11 |tElizabeth I 970 11 |tThe Virgin Queen as Nurse of the Church: Manipulating an Image of Elizabeth I in Court Sermons|cPaul Strauss |fStrauss, Paul|p185 970 11 |tQuestionable Contexts: A Pedigree Book and Queen Elizabeth's Teeth|cSonja Drimmer|fDrimmer, Sonja|p203 970 11 |tFor My Eyes, Part 1|cAmber Harris Leichner|p225 970 11 |tFor My Eyes, Part 2|cAmber Harris Leichner|p227 970 11 |tThe First of That Name|cRegina Buccola|fBuccola, Regina |p229 970 11 |tGrace O'Malley 970 11 |tNotorious: Grainne Ni Mhaille, Graven Memory, and the Uses of Irish Legend|cBrandie R. Siegfried|fSiegfried, Brandie R.|p233 970 11 |tGRACE: O'Malley Meets the English Queen (1593)|cHeidi Czerwiec|fCzerwiec, Heidi|p251 970 11 |tGifts and Poison, Whispers and Letters 970 11 |tMore Than a Wife and Mother: Jane Dudley, the Woman Who Bequeathed a Parrot and Served Five Queens|cCatherine Medici|fMedici, Catherine|p255 970 11 |tPoisoning Queens in Early Modern Fact and Fiction|cJo Eldridge Carney|p269 970 11 |tOn the Revolutions of Space|cMegan Gannon|fGannon, Megan |p285 970 11 |tThe Kingdom if I Can|cGrace Bauer|fBauer, Grace|p287 970 01 |tIndex|p291 998 r0001|b09-29-15|cm|da|e-|feng|gnyu|h0|i1 998 r0001|b09-29-15|cm|da|e-|feng|gnyu|h0|i1
|