John Skelton Criticism
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Skelton, John (Literary Criticism (1400-1800))
- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- John Skelton
- John Skelton
- Skelton
- The Voice of Dissonance: Pattern in Skelton's Colyn Cloute
- Speke, Parrot: Skelton's Allegorical Denunciation of Cardinal Wolsey
- Introduction to Poems
- Skelton: The Bowge of Court
- ‘The Garlande of Laurell’: Masque Spectacular
- Religious Orders in Skelton's Colyn Cloute
- Skelton's Use of Persona
- Childhood and Death: A Reading of John Skeleton's Phillip Sparrow
- Withinne that develes temple: an examination of Skelton's The Tunnyng of Elynour Rummyng
- Skelton's Triumph: The Garland of Laurel and Literary Fame
- The Responsibilities of Madness: John Skelton, ‘Speke, Parrot,’ and Homeopathic Satire
- Skelton and Traditional Satire: Ware the Hauke
- Taking Jane's Cue: Phyllyp Sparowe as a Primer for Women Readers
- John Skelton and the Poetics of Primitive Accumulation
- John Skelton's Phyllyp Sparowe as Satire: A Revaluation
- When A Sparrow Falls: Women Readers, Male Critics, and John Skelton's Phyllyp Sparowe
- Rebellion, Treachery and Poetic Identity in Skelton's Dolorous Dethe
- Further Reading
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Skelton, John (Poetry Criticism)
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- John Skelton
- John Skelton: The Structure of the Poem
- Skelton
- Some Graver Fish
- Observations on the Derivative Method of Skelton's Realism
- Skelton's Garlande of Laurell and the Chaucerian Tradition
- The Twittering Machine: Skelton's Ornithology of the Early Tudor State
- Leaky Ladies and Droopy Dames: The Grotesque Realism of Skelton's The Tunnynge of Elynour Rummynge
- When a Sparrow Falls: Woman Readers, Male Critics, and John Skelton's Phyllyp Sparowe
- Further Reading