Lanyer, Aemilia - John Rogers (essay date 2000)
John Rogers (essay date 2000)
SOURCE: Rogers, John. “The Passion of a Female Literary Tradition: Aemilia Lanyer's Salve Deus Rex Judæorum.” Huntington Library Quarterly 63, no. 4 (2000): 435-46.
[In the following essay, Rogers delineates the social and cultural conditions that influenced the creation of Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum and regards the volume as an “unprecedented achievement.”]
As the first significant book of original poetry published by an Englishwoman, Aemilia Lanyer's 1611 volume of poems, Salve Deus Rex Judæorum, bears a considerable burden. The volume self-consciously assumes the task of delivering to posterity a new literary tradition, a newly public, because published, tradition of poetry by women. Intimately tied to this unprecedented achievement is the stunning claim for her poetic vocation that Lanyer makes in that volume's title poem, a narration of the Passion, the events surrounding the...
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Criticism
- Barbara K. Lewalski (essay date 1985)
- Tina Krontiris (essay date 1992)
- Jonathan Goldberg (essay date 1997)
- Barbara K. Lewalski (essay date 1998)
- Marshall Grossman (essay date 1998)
- Achsah Guibbory (essay date 1998)
- Susanne Woods (essay date 1999)
- John Rogers (essay date 2000)
- Susanne Woods (essay date 2000)
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- John Huntington (essay date 2001)
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