List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction: English Literature and Anglicised Britain Crossing the Borders: Ireland and the Irish Between England and America English Colonialism and National Identity in Early Modern Ireland Malcolm in the Middle: James VI and I, George Buchanan and the Divine Right of Kings 'Bruited Abroad': John White and Thomas Harriot's Colonial Representations of Ancient and Britain Translating the Reformation: John Bale's Irish Vocacyon Cicero, Tacitus and the Reform of Ireland in the 1590s From English to British Literature: John Lyly's Euphues and the 1590 The Faerie Queene Spenser and the Stuart Succession Spenser, Drayton and the Question of Britain Shakespeare's Ecumenical Britain Index
Andrew Hadfield is the author of "Shakespeare and Renaissance Culture (2003), "Edmund Spenser's Irish Experience" (1997), and is the editor of the "Cambridge Companion to Spenser" (2001).
ANDREW HADFIELD is Professor of English at the University of Sussex. He is the author of Shakespeare and Renaissance Political Culture (2003) and Edmund Spenser's Irish Experience (1997), as well as numerous other studies of Renaissance literature and culture. He is the editor of the Cambridge Companion to Spenser (2001), and has taught at universities in Ireland, Wales, England and the USA.
'Over the past fifteen years, the work of Andrew Hadfield has been at the forefront of examining Ireland's importance for the Elizabethan imagination. His new collection of essays...usefully assembles a number of pieces that have appeared over the past decade, with two previously unpublished papers.' - Times Literary Supplement 'Hadfield's argument is exciting and stimulating...surely deserves gratitude of Shakespeareans and Spenserians for preventing both misopolitical reading and naive politicization of the early modern texts' - Mari Mizuno, Studies in English Literature, English No.47, (Mar., 2006)
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