Elizabethan Top Ten
English

About The Book

Engaging with histories of the book and of reading as well as with studies of material culture this volume explores ’popularity’ in early modern English writings. Is ’popular’ best described as a theoretical or an empirical category in this period? How can we account for the gap between modern canonicity and early modern print popularity? How might we weight the evidence of popularity from citations serial editions print runs reworkings or extant copies? Is something that sells a lot always popular even where the readership for print is only a small proportion of the population or does popular need to carry something of its etymological sense of the public the people? Four initial chapters sketch out the conceptual and evidential issues while the second part of the book consists of ten short chapters-a ’hit parade’- in which eminent scholars take a genre or a single exemplar - play romance sermon or almanac among other categories-as a means to articulate more general issues. Throughout the aim is to unpack and interrogate assumptions about the popular and to decentre canonical narratives about for example the sermons of Donne or Andrewes over Smith or the plays of Shakespeare over Mucedorus. Revisiting Elizabethan literary culture through the lenses of popularity this collection allows us to view the subject from an unfamiliar angle-in which almanacs are more popular than sonnets and proclamations more numerous than plays and in which authors familiar to us are displaced by names now often forgotten.
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