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What Literature Knows About Your Brain | literary criticism listens…
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?paged=37I am thinking here of Robert Watson, ‘False Immortality in Measure for Measure: Comic Means, Tragic Ends’, Shakespeare Quarterly, 41 (1990), and Kiernan Ryan, ‘Measure for Measure: Marxism before Marx’, in -
Sixteenth Century Society Conference
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/item/44.3.74/The same form was used the early 1580s by Thomas Watson in his 1582 Hekatompathia, a collection of a hundred 18-line “sonnets”: each poem contains three 6-line “staffes.” This ... work itself is not by Elizabeth but rather an act of royal -
The London International Palaeography Summer school 2019 | The…
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/manuscriptslab/the-london-international-palaeography-summer-school-2019/Julia Crick). Liturgical and Devotional Manuscripts I (Dr Jenny Stratford and Dr Rowan Watson). ... Liturgical and Devotional Manuscripts II (Dr Jenny Stratford and Dr Rowan Watson). -
Can Analytic Philosophy and Literary Criticism be Friends?
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/item/45.3.1/I would confidently pit the prose of Sarah Stroud, Galen Strawson, Gary Watson, Jennifer Saul, Harry Frankfurt, and Susan Wolf against that of Nussbaum at any time. -
What Literature Knows About Your Brain | literary criticism listens…
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?paged=31The only significant human presence, however, remains opaque. In the environmentally-aware Shakespeare criticism of Robert Watson, Gabriel Egan, and Simon Palfrey, it’s apparent that the problem of other minds -
Dissertations
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/item/48.3.14/Sonnet sequences by Edmund Spenser, Thomas Watson, Sidney, Fulke Greville, Mary Wroth, and Shakespeare testify to an extensive effort among English love poets to offer a Protestant English literary exemplum to -
admin | What Literature Knows About Your Brain | Page 37
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?author=1&paged=37I am thinking here of Robert Watson, ‘False Immortality in Measure for Measure: Comic Means, Tragic Ends’, Shakespeare Quarterly, 41 (1990), and Kiernan Ryan, ‘Measure for Measure: Marxism before Marx’, in -
Uncategorized | What Literature Knows About Your Brain | Page 37
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?cat=1&paged=37I am thinking here of Robert Watson, ‘False Immortality in Measure for Measure: Comic Means, Tragic Ends’, Shakespeare Quarterly, 41 (1990), and Kiernan Ryan, ‘Measure for Measure: Marxism before Marx’, in -
Spenser Among the Tombs: Some Petrarchan Paratexts
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/item/51.1.4/235. [3] See, for instance, Thomas Watson’s Hekatompathia (1582) for the author’s detailed notes on the debts he owes Petrarch in various sonnets. -
admin | What Literature Knows About Your Brain | Page 31
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?author=1&paged=31The only significant human presence, however, remains opaque. In the environmentally-aware Shakespeare criticism of Robert Watson, Gabriel Egan, and Simon Palfrey, it’s apparent that the problem of other minds
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