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Donne, Milton, and the end of humanist rhetoric
Thomas O. Sloane
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Frontmatter
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List of Illustrations (page ix)
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Preface: An Unsubtle Exordium (page xi)
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I. In Our End Is Our Beginning, and Vice Versa (page 1)
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Two Speeches (page 3)
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Two Poems (page 34)
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Janus Academicus (page 57)
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II. Rhetoric in Controversy, and Vice Versa (page 65)
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Erasmus (page 67)
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Humanism (page 85)
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Augustine (page 100)
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Cicero (page 112)
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A History of English Humanist Rhetorical Theory (page 130)
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III. Donne's Rhetoric (page 145)
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Inconstancy Begets a Constant Habit (page 147)
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John Donne's Augustinian Formalism: A Trial (page 165)
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Rhetoric as a Habit of Thought and Movement of Mind (page 180)
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IV. Miltonic Form (page 209)
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The Disintegration of Humanist Rhetoric (page 211)
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Milton's Rhetoric: A Prolusion (page 232)
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Thinking Mythologically: "Some Stronger Impulse" (page 249)
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Conclusion: Controversia as Inventio (page 279)
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Notes (page 291)
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Index (page 325)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
---|---|---|
RES | 38.150 (May 1987): 248-249 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/515439 |
PhAR | 21.1 (1988): 73-75 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/40237535 |
CL | 39.3 (Summer 1987): 281-282 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/1770254 |
RMRLL | 40.4 (1986): 257-258 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/1566594 |
JEGP | 85.3 (Jul. 1986): 450-454 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/27709705 |
RQ | 41.3 (Autumn 1988): 525-528 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2861782 |
SwR | 95.4 (Fall 1987): lxx-lxxii, lxxiv | http://www.jstor.org/stable/27545782 |
Citable Link
Published: c1985
Publisher: University of California Press
- 9780520052123 (hardcover)