Cultural Semiotics, Spenser, and the Captive WomanLehigh University Press, 1995 - 278 páginas In Cultural Semiotics, Spenser, and the Captive Woman, author Louise Schleiner uses concepts from A. J. Greimas to analyze The Shepheardes Calender (1579) as a discourse and as a definitive text for the Elizabethan "political unconscious," in the sense of Fredric Jameson, who also drew on Greimas. The book demonstrates sociolinguistic patterns at work in Elizabethan ideological conflicts, at a level that shows how those patterns were related to the energies of people's sexuality and their political and religious commitments. Through explaining this libidinal and political functioning of the Calender, in its time and for Spenser as a new poet, the book identifies an "ideologeme," widely observable in England of the 1580s and 1590s: that of the captive/capturing woman, a unit of interfactional and interclass discourse. |
Índice
13 | |
17 | |
The Unity of the Calender | 27 |
Prophetic Pastor or Sickly Dying Lover? | 30 |
The Morality of Power | 35 |
Semiotics And The Recognition Of An Ideologeme | 40 |
The Greimas Model and the Calenders Perspectival Framing | 42 |
The Generative Trajectory | 43 |
Economic Interests and the Captive Woman Ideologeme | 116 |
How the Ideologeme Began To Tick and Work | 123 |
The Classeme MalenessFemaleness within Ideologemes | 125 |
The Captive Woman at Work | 129 |
Britomart vs Radigund Gloriana of the Shield vs Philotime | 130 |
The Ideologeme in the Arcadia Old and New | 138 |
Lyly Dowland and the Squirearchist Pattern | 143 |
Shrewtaming Pandosto and Shakespeares Rewriting of the Woman Recaptured | 151 |
The Trajectorys Syntactic Side Including Actants of Communication and of Narration | 46 |
Communication Actants and the Calenders Perspectival Framing | 49 |
The Semantic Side of the Generative Trajectory | 54 |
The Narrative Program | 59 |
Is the Narrative Program GenderSpecific? | 62 |
The Shepheardes Calender Analyzed through the Greimas Model | 65 |
Segmentation and ExtractionInventory | 66 |
Structuration | 70 |
Recognizing the Base Narrative Program | 75 |
The Instrumental Narrative Programs | 80 |
Isaiah Excrescence as Expression and the Figurative Isotopy | 89 |
The Calender as Prophecy and the Captive Woman Ideologeme | 102 |
The Calenders Politics and Theology | 105 |
The New Ideologeme and the Calenders Solution for the Insoluble Conflict | 109 |
How Things Turn Out in December | 113 |
Entrepreneurial Satire in Willobie His Avisa | 158 |
Britomart vs Penelope | 163 |
Tinkering with the Ideologeme? A Countess Tries to Speak | 166 |
What the Queen Said | 176 |
Compositional Order and Colins Framing of Male and Female Loves in The Shepheardes Calender | 179 |
The Clear Identities | 183 |
The Beclouded Identities | 187 |
Groupings among the Eclogues and their Order of Composition | 193 |
Colins Two Loves | 198 |
Algorithm or Description Procedures Used | 202 |
Data of the Algorithms Application | 208 |
Notes | 240 |
265 | |
275 | |
Términos y frases comunes
actants actorialized aeglogue apparatus artistic/prophetic expression Avisa base narrative program Britomart Burghley Calender's Cambridge capturing chapter classematic Colin Clout competence concept constructed sememes Countess court Cuddie cultural David defined Dictionary Dido diegesis discourse analysis eclogues Edmund Spenser Eliza Elizabeth Elizabethan England English entrepreneurial Faerie Queene February fiction figure flock frame function Gabriel Harvey gender gloss Greimas Greimas's Greimassian Harvey ideologeme ideological inventory isotopy Jameson January lady lass Leicester lexemes libidinal literary Lyly male marriage Mary Mary Sidney metaphor modal muse namely narrator noted November Pandosto paratexts particular pastoral maker perspective pipe poems poet poetic Poetry political portrayed prophetic Protestant Radigund readers Renaissance repelled respected chaste female Rosalind S₂ semantic sememes semes semiotic square sexual Shakespeare sheep Shepheardes Calender shepherd Sidney sing Spenser Studies squirearchist pattern stage structure swain syntactic syntax textual thematized tion trajectory University Press verse wife women words writer
Referencias a este libro
Time and the Calendar in Edmund Spenser's Poetical Works Émilien Mohsen Vista previa restringida - 2005 |