Loading...

Feminine Rhetorical Culture

Tudor Adaptations of Ovid's "Heroides</I>

by Greenhut (Author)
©1988 Others XII, 213 Pages
Series: American University Studies , Volume 59

Summary

Although fictional characters do not create their own speech, the illusion that they do is often crucial to a reader's appreciation of a literary text. Feminine Rhetorical Culture examines the development of the illusion that literary characters speak through the reader's appreciation of a metaphorical connection between speech, sexuality, and morality. The book focuses on nominally feminine speech in the works of three male writers: Ovid, in the HEROIDES, George Turberville, in his TRANSLATION OF OVID'S Heroides, and Michael Drayton, in ENGLAND'S HEROICAL EPISTLES. In the intersection of their adaptations of culture and language, they mediate and qualify cultural perspectives about feminine speech and relationship between men and women.

Details

Pages
XII, 213
Year
1988
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820405322
Language
English
Published
New York, Bern, Frankfurt/M., Paris, 1988. XII, 213 pp.

Biographical notes

Greenhut (Author)

Previous

Title: Feminine Rhetorical Culture