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The Age of Thomas Nashe
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Table of Contents

Section 1 Beyond the City: Sex and the city: Nashe, Ovid and the problems of urbanity. This sorrow's heavenly: Christ's Teares and the Jews. Blame-in-praise irony in Lenten Stuffe. Nashe's fish: misogyny, romance, and the ocean in Lenten Stuffe. Section 2 Mediating Bodies: Reproducing paper monsters in Thomas Nashe. Nashe's extemporal vein and his Tarltonizing wit. Gross anatomies: mapping matter and literary form in Thomas Nashe and Andreas Vesalius. Section 3 Trespasses of Authorship: Wit without money in Nashe. Nashe's vain vein: poetic pleasure and the limits of utility. Postscript: Nashe untrimmed: the way we teach him today.

About the Author

Stephen Guy-Bray is Professor of English at the University of British Columbia, Canada. Joan Pong Linton is Associate Professor of English at Indiana University, USA. Steve Mentz is Professor of English at St. John's University, USA. Steve Mentz, Georgia Brown, Jonathan Crewe, Jennifer Andersen, Melissa Hull Geil, Karen Kettnich, John V. Nance, David Landreth, Corey McEleny, Stephen Guy-Bray, Joan Pong Linton.

Reviews

'For those of us who hope that one day the 1590s may be known as "Nashean," this is the book we have been waiting for. Collectively these eleven essays re-describe Thomas Nashe's relation to his historical moment, inviting readers to consider him within circuits of authorship, print culture, and urban living at the end of sixteenth century. The collection considers the breadth of Nashe's idiosyncratic and challenging writings, significantly altering the trajectory of his work away from the orbit of The Unfortunate Traveler. This book offers fresh critical insights alongside practical advice on how to enthuse an undergraduate classroom with Nashe's virtuosic, flighty, maddening, sometimes downright naughty prose.' Julian Yates, University of Delaware, USA 'Thomas Nashe's importance to our understanding of early modern English culture and early modern literary production can't really be denied, and yet scholarship on the broad body of his work is not as robust as it should be. This volume represents a strong, thoughtful, enlightening collection of essays that address the breadth of Nashe's texts beyond The Unfortunate Traveler. It should find a receptive audience of scholars and advanced graduate students.' Constance Relihan, Auburn University, USA 'These essays are a celebration of the richness, complexity, and continuing novelty of Nashe's works.' SHARP News '... the authors offer many new insights and approaches to the variety of texts that Nashe published in the very productive final decade of the sixteenth century. ... excellent essays fill out the volume.' Renaissance Quarterly

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