Thomas Nashe Criticism
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Nashe, Thomas (Vol. 88)
- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Introduction to The Works of Thomas Nashe
- Prose in the ‘Golden’ Period
- Thomas Nashe and The Unfortunate Traveller
- The Miseries of Authorship and Pierce Penilesse
- Nashe's Place in English Literature
- The Loss of Decorum
- The Pamphleteer
- Nashe's Orthodoxy
- Festivity and Productivity
- Summer Fruit and Autumn Leaves: Thomas Nashe in 1593
- ‘Playing the Knave’: Social Symbolism and Interplay in Thomas Nashe—Pierce Penilesse
- Christs Teares, Nashe's ‘Forsaken Extremities.’
- The Heroine as Courtesan: Dishonesty, Romance, and the Sense of an Ending in The Unfortunate Traveler.
- Further Reading
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Nashe, Thomas (Vol. 41)
- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Thomas Nashe; The Picaresque and Realistic Novel
- Thomas Nashe and the Picaresque Novel
- Polemic, the Rhetorical Tradition, and The Unfortunate Traveller
- The Low Style in Nashe's The Unfortunate Traveler
- Tom Nashe and Jack Wilton: Personality as Structure in The Unfortunate Traveller
- Artistic Coherence in The Unfortunate Traveller
- Wits Wantonness: The Unfortunate Traveller as Picaresque
- Thomas Nashe and the Functional Grotesque in Elizabethan Prose Fiction
- The Unfortunate Traveller: Nashe's Narrative in a 'Cleane Different Vaine'
- 'Good Sir, Be Ruld by Me': Patterns of Domination and Manipulation in Thomas Nashe's The Unfortunate Traveller
- Nashe and the Stuff of Prose
- Nashe, Contradiction, and Interplay: The Example of Lenten Stuffe
- Further Reading