Cornell University Press
Outlaw Rhetoric
About this book
Outlaw Rhetoric examines the substantial and largely unexplored archive of vernacular rhetorical guides produced in England between 1500 and 1700. Jenny Mann reveals the political stakes of the vernacular rhetorical project in the age of Shakespeare.
Author / Editor information
Jenny C. Mann is Assistant Professor of English at Cornell University.
Reviews
Mann... pays particular attention to the gendered implications acquired by enallage, the figure for 'exchange': 'In order to make enallage speak English. to turn it into the "Figure of exchangethese rhetorics redefine it as a mode of pronoun substitutionturning enallage into a figure that exchanges "he" for "she." As a resul—twithin the catalogue of English figures of speech—the "Figure of Exchange" becomes the rhetorical expression of gender transvestismeven bodily hermaphroditism....' (p.148). Through a series of penetrating readingsMann reveals that enallage guides the sense of several canonical literary works. She provides an especially astute study of Shakespeare's Sonnet 20... [and] a fascinating analysis of Thomas Wilson’s Arte of Rhetorique (1553)...
Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr.:
Jenny C. Mann considers the influence of English vernacular rhetorical handbooks on Renaissance literature, with particular emphasis upon the cultural anxieties and imaginative opportunities engendered by the nationalist project of translating the classical art of rhetoric into English.... Mann's study is intelligent, wide-ranging, and elegantly written; it makes a fine contribution to scholarship on early modern rhetoric and English nationalism.
Marjorie Harrington:
In her thoughtful, well-researched debut book, Jenny C. Mann... explores the intersection between early modern rhetorical manuals and literary works.... Outlaw Rhetoric is an extremely valuable tool for understanding the cultural role of vernacular rhetoric in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England, not least because of this spatial and chronological specificity—a refreshing change from other discussions of rhetoric in the Renaissance, which treat it as a continuation or resurrection of classical practices.
Outlaw Rhetoric is an intelligent, imaginative and extremely well-written study. Mann reveals just how fruitful historical formalism can be in Early Modern Studies when one gets really historical without forsaking literary attention, yet really literary without losing historical nuance. This is a crucial book for those hoping to understand the early modern English appropriation of the Latinate rhetorical tradition both theoretically in vernacular rhetorics and practically in its actual literature.
Wayne Rebhorn, University of Texas at Austin, author of The Emperor of Men's Minds:
Outlaw Rhetoric is a smart, insightful, well-informed, and beautifully written book. Using English Renaissance rhetoric manuals in conjunction with the literary texts informed by them, Jenny C. Mann argues that one of the main cultural projects of the English Renaissance, namely its desire to elevate the English language and place it on a level with Latin and Greek, was beset with problems and conflicts from the start. In support of this assertion about the changing place of rhetoric in English Renaissance culture, she offers a series of readings of important literary works by Cavendish, Jonson, Shakespeare, Sidney, and Spenser.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
vii -
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List of Illustrations
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction: A Tale of Robin Hood
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1. Common Rhetoric: Planting Figures of Speech in the English Shire
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2. The Trespasser: Displacing Virgilian Figures in Spenser’s Faerie Queene
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3. The Insertour: Putting the Parenthesis in Sidney’s Arcadia
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4. The Changeling: Mingling Heroes and Hobgoblins in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream
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5. The Figure of Exchange: Gender Exchange in Shakespeare’s Sonnet 20 and Jonson’s Epicene
146 -
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6. The Mingle-Mangle: The Hodgepodge of Fancy and Philosophy in Cavendish’s Blazing World
171 -
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Conclusion “Words Made Visible” and the Turn against Rhetoric
201 -
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Appendix of English Rhetorical Manuals
219 -
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Bibliography
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Index
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