Shell 1999
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Shell, Alison. ‘’Catholicism, Controversy, and the English Literary Imagination, 1558-1660. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999.
argues that prejudice against study of Catholics / Catholic literature is ongoing
argues for including Catholics among the downtrodden of early modern England; women, homosexuals, Jews
The livid flash: decadence, anti-Catholic revenge tragedy and the dehistoricised critic
- "All critics are agreed that the strobe-like imagery of Italianate revenge-tragedy lights up the corrupt world inhabited by the speaker and the other characters; none has demonstrated an awareness that both the corruption of that world, and the means of its illumination, are conceived in speci®cally anti-Catholic terms. In fact, there are innumerable parallels between the imagery of Webster and Middleton and the apocalyptic image-clusters of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century anti-Catholic polemic, and the former is designed to evoke the latter.” (23)
Catholic poetics and the protestant canon
- ”But though Crashaw has been deracinated by the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, he was certainly not isolated at the time. Among his countrymen, he was in ̄uential; plenty of English poetry is Crashavian, both in print and -- as so often with Catholic verse -- in manuscript” (57)
Robert Southwell, Richard Crashaw — tears poetry
- "Though it would be a mistake to claim that Southwell single-handedly re-introduced imaginative religious poetry to England after the Reformation, the posthumous publication in 1595 of his collection Saint Peters Complaint gave sacred verse a definitive new direction, and helped to create a climate in which non-biblical religious poetry became increasingly acceptable.” (57)
- "Scholarship has tended to concentrate on the in ̄uence of South- well's short poems upon the religious lyricists of the next generation: naturally enough, given how ®rmly literary studies are still tied to anthological familiarity. But a wider view of Southwell's in ̄uence ± on the longer religious poem, and on private meditations ± indicates how he met a common devotional need which, in Protestant circles, was only just beginning to be acknowledged again.” (61)
Southwell executed in 1595, poems published in printed very shortly thereafter; widely read and popular