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Authorship and authority

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King James VI of Scotland and I of England participated in the burgeoning literary culture of the Renaissance as patron and author. This book explores the full range of these extensive writings, wh...
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  • 01 September 2007
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James VI of Scotland and I of England participated in the burgeoning literary culture of the Renaissance, not only as a monarch and patron, but as an author in his own right, publishing extensively in a number of different genres over four decades. As the first monograph devoted to James as an author, this book offers a fresh perspective on his reigns in Scotland and England, and also on the inter-relationship of authorship and authority, literature and politics in the Renaissance.

Beginning with the poetry he wrote in Scotland in the 1580s, it moves through a wide range of his writings, including scriptural exegeses, political, social and theological treatises and printed speeches, concluding with his manuscript poetry of the early 1620s. The book combines extensive primary research into the preparation, material form and circulation of these varied writings, with theoretically informed consideration of the relationship between authors, texts and readers. The discussion thus explores James’s responses to, and interventions in, a range of literary, political and religious debates, and reveals the development of his aims and concerns as an author.

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Price: £85.00
Pages: 256
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 01 September 2007
ISBN: 9780719074868
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / General, Literary studies: general, HISTORY / Modern / 17th Century, European history, General and world history

REVIEWS Icon

Rickard’s book is … welcome and long overdue … a book that deserves attention from both literary scholars and historians

This is a timely and valuable contribution to Jacobean literary scholarship which … deserves to be widely read

an illuminating and much welcome study, which will prove indispensable to future students of the literary production of this most mysterious of kings

an authoritative and fascinating book … Everyone at all interested in James VI and I ought to read it

Rickard’s intriguing and accessible account certainly provides many new perspectives from which to view James’s reign

Introduction: Reading James VI and I
1. Constructing the Writer-King: the early poetry
2. The word of God and the word of the King: the early scriptural exegeses
3. Print, authority, interpretation: the major prose works
4. Monumentalising the royal author: The Workes (1616)
5. The late poetry and the deconstruction of authority
Afterword
Bibliography
Index