<p>Renaissance Papers is a collection of the best scholarly essays submitted each year to the Southeastern Renaissance Conference. The nine articles in this volume reflect a wide range of approaches to Renaissance literary performance and theory. The first four essays seek reasons for the success of various Renaissance plays: Christopher Cobb examines how Thomas Heywood casts heroic action in a positive light in his romantic dramas whereas Lucas Erne urges that Thomas Kyd&#39;s Spanish Tragedy owes its success to its Christian portrait of Heironimo&#39;s unsuccessful attempt to recognize a benevolent deity. Robert Reeder looks at Renaissance educational manuals in order to clarify views on precocity in Richard III Bartholomew Fair and Twelfth Night; and Thomas L. Martin and Duke Pesta investigate and refute postmodern claims about a &quot;transvestite stage.&quot; Scott Lucas shows how several sonnets of Fulke Greville&#39;s Caelica disorient the reader underscoring the poet&#39;s doubts about human reason and perception; and Pamela Macfie illustrates how Marlowe&#39;s ghostly allusions to Ovid&#39;s Heroides in Hero and Leander darken the portrayal of the tragic lovers&#39; frustration. The final three essays concern the 17th-century literary giants Donne and Milton: Jay Stubblefield shows Donne&#39;s 1619 sermon to the Virginia Company to be a uniquely Thomistic commentary on the conflicting motives behind England&#39;s exploits in the New World; and John Wall and John T. Shawcross explore the effects of John Milton&#39;s poems on Renaissance and modern readers. M. Thomas Hester is professor of English at North Carolina State University.</p>
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