Hero and Leander, Christopher Marlowe - Georgia E. Brown (essay date 1998)
Georgia E. Brown (essay date 1998)
SOURCE: Brown, Georgia E. “Breaking the Canon: Marlowe's Challenge to the Literary Status Quo in Hero and Leander.” In Marlowe, History, and Sexuality: New Critical Essays on Christopher Marlowe, edited by Paul Whitfield White, pp. 59-75. New York: AMS Press, Inc., 1998.
[In the following essay, Brown delineates the central thematic concerns of Hero and Leander and assesses its influence on the literary culture of the 1590s.]
Why did Marlowe write Hero and Leander? Most critics have attempted to answer this question by approaching the poem as an essay on love. William Keach, for example, maintains that Marlowe's poem is about “the risks, limitations and disappointments of romantic love.”1 Marlowe's intentions are ultimately unrecoverable, but one way of approaching the question is to consider Marlowe's poem in its generic context. Hero and Leander is part of...
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Criticism
- Paul D. Miller (essay date April 1953)
- Martin T. Williams (essay date September 1955)
- Russell A. Fraser (essay date October 1958)
- Eugene B. Cantelupe (essay date January 1963)
- Erich Segal (essay date fall 1963)
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- M. Morgan Holmes (essay date June 1995)
- Judith Haber (essay date autumn 1998)
- Georgia E. Brown (essay date 1998)
- John Leonard (essay date winter 2000)
- Claude Summers (essay date 2000)
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