Patriotism, Power, and Print: National Consciousness in Tudor EnglandDuquesne University Press, 2003 - 160ÆäÀÌÁö This study examines English patriotism in the sixteenth century to discern its nature and modes of cultural expression, and to consider its use in political and religious propaganda. Focusing on a time when patriotism had yet to be truly conceptualised, Brennan investigates the sixteenth century while giving voice to the controversy between modernist and revisionist writers concerning the timing of the birth of nationalism. This astute work deals with a broad range of historical and literary texts, many of which are not often explored. |
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115 ÆäÀÌÁö
... ballad was also news . In one of his offerings , Deloney described the events which took place on the 21st and 29th July , 1588 -shortly after the first sighting of the Armada - and the ballad was printed and for sale on the streets ...
... ballad was also news . In one of his offerings , Deloney described the events which took place on the 21st and 29th July , 1588 -shortly after the first sighting of the Armada - and the ballad was printed and for sale on the streets ...
116 ÆäÀÌÁö
... ballad was not dated , but must have been written after the defeat of the Armada as it referred to the way God dealt with the ' Spanish spite by drowning'.25 Another Thomas Deloney ballad on the defeat of the Armada combined patriotism ...
... ballad was not dated , but must have been written after the defeat of the Armada as it referred to the way God dealt with the ' Spanish spite by drowning'.25 Another Thomas Deloney ballad on the defeat of the Armada combined patriotism ...
117 ÆäÀÌÁö
... ballad to celebrate the taking of Cadiz by the Earl of Essex and Lord Howard on the 21st of June , 1596. The ballad concentrates on praise for the ' most valient and hardye ' Essex and on the spoils and profits : ' Now ' quoth the noble ...
... ballad to celebrate the taking of Cadiz by the Earl of Essex and Lord Howard on the 21st of June , 1596. The ballad concentrates on praise for the ' most valient and hardye ' Essex and on the spoils and profits : ' Now ' quoth the noble ...
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