`As a reviewer, I am hard-pressed to find even a quibble with this
book. The great merit of Uncloistered Virtue: English Political
Literature 1640-1660 lies in its careful, painstaking
contextualization of the literature of the interregnum year by year
and even month by month ... He captures a delicate, complicated
interaction between politics, history and literary invention that
cannot be reduced to fit a simple ideological model. Professor
Corns's prose
is clear and elegant, even elegiac in the final chapters. He has
made a major contribution to seventeenth-century studies, to Milton
studies and to new historicism.'
Frank Cass Journals, Vol 16, No 2 (Aug 1993)
`a tautly-written book which consistently illuminates ... His real
achievement ... is to make clear, in a series of strenuous yet
patient analyses, the literary artifice which guarantees the power
of Milton's polemical writing ... a ground-breaking study which is
an important contribution to historiography as well as to Milton
scholarship.'
A Journal of English Language and Literature
`most impressive achievement ...the first attempt at a
comprehensive literary study of 1640-1660 ...The virtues of the
book are in its careful contextual reading of works long valued in
the literary canon, together with a generally approving assessment
of radical literature ... as rich and important writing ...Corns is
unpretentiously conservative in method, and warmly sympathetic in
spirit to the predicaments of his subjects' Nigel Smith, The
Times Literary Supplement
`Thomas Corns has written a better history book than he seems to
realise ... In fact this is a first-rate history book ... a
first-rate piece of literary criticism ... a first-rate collection
of essays ... it is written with precision and elegance. It
deserves a wide audience.
John Morrill
'a highly selective examination of English poetry and prose of the
mid-17th century ... Students of the period will discover valuable
and useful critical insights.'
S. Archer, Texas A & M University, Choice, Mar '93
'...his accounts of Lovelace and Herrick are rich and detailed, and
offer a convincing analysis of how their erotic poetry is bound up
with their royalist politics: ... Dr Corns is a good close reader
with a sharp eye for significant detail, and some major questions
are brought helpfully, ... into focus. The several accounts of
Milton porvide a thoughtful reading of Milton's rhetoric of
argument, ... Dr Corns is astute in analysing how Milton deploys
his
evidence and authorities,"
The Seventeenth Century. Vol. IX No. 1. Spring 1994
' ... this exceptionally fine book offers new perceptions and
strikingly illuminating comments on nearly every page. Its very
considerable achievement is to make us realize how little we have
appreciated the diversity and richness of the cultural history of
these so much studied years. This achievement does not lie in
address to neglected texts ... it lies rather in the sensitivity
and persuasiveness with which Dr Corns repoliticizes familiar
texts, ...
its scope is far more comprehensive than that of any other study.
Dr Corns is an attentive, sensitive, and careful reader, There are
some fine, crisp judgements: This is historiicizing at its
best,
preferring the scholarly and critical accuracy of historical and
textual particularities to the clarion call of large
generalizations.'
N.H.Keeble, University of Stirling. Notes and Queries June '94
'Corns succeeds in his programme of reanimation by combining
effectively a critic's trained eye for textual detail with a good
historian's seemingly effortless narrative mastery of great masses
of names, events, motivations, and social and political
interconnections.'
Archiv
`this is a sharp and most valuable addition to writing about
mid-seventeenth-century literature.'
Modern Language Review
`Corns works with an ideal of balance, and, unlike numerous recent
works in thes field, a liberal eschewing of theoretical and
ahistorical political commitment. This is a good, useful,
traditional book. thehistorical contextualizings are aduqate, the
close readings excellent.'
English Studies Review
`fascinating, wide ranging, richly detailed, and superbly sensitive
account of the literature of the English Revolution ... This is a
fine book.'
Nick Groom, University of Exeter, Bunyan Studies, no 8, 1998
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |