

An edition of Interpretation and theology in Spenser (1994)
By Darryl J. Gless
Publish Date
1994
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
eng
Pages
280
Description:
The extent to which a knowledge of sixteenth-century theological doctrines can help readers interpret the works of Edmund Spenser has long been a matter of controversy. In Interpretation and theology in Spenser Darryl J. Gless offers a new approach: drawing on recent literary theories, he focuses less on what Spenser intended than on the ways readers might construe both the poet's works and the theological doctrines which those works invoke. Professor Gless demonstrates the seldom-admitted fact that theological texts, like literary ones, are subject to the interpretive activity of readers. Informed by this approach to Elizabethan theology, he provides a useful survey of major doctrinal concepts, and develops a thorough analysis of the first, most widely studied, book of Spenser's Elizabethan epic The Faerie Queene. He concludes with series of concise illustrations of ways in which theological perspectives can enrich significant moments in later, less overtly theological, passages of Spenser's great poem.
subjects: Christianity and literature, English Christian poetry, English Epic poetry, History and criticism, Religion, Theology, Doctrinal, in literature, Poésie chrétienne anglaise, Faerie queene (Spenser, Edmund), Christianisme et littérature, Histoire et critique, Poésie épique anglaise, Poésie religieuse anglaise, History, Théologie dogmatique, Theologie, Early modern, Théologie, Dans la littérature, Théologie dogmatique dans la littérature, Spenser, edmund, 1552?-1599, Theology in literature, Christian poetry
People: Edmund Spenser (1552?-1599)
Times: 16th century, Early modern, 1500-1700