his lecture traces the course of English literature from the early sixteenth to the mid-seventeenth century, by all accounts one of the most momentous, tumultuous and fascinating periods in the history of the country, under the reign of two dynasties, the Tudors and the Stuarts. During this time, England underwent five changes of religion within one generation and, not long after, saw a revolution with the public execution of the king followed by a bloody civil war, while at the same time laying the foundations of the global empire, whose aftermath is with us till today. Yet against the background of this violent history – and partly perhaps as a product of it – the country also saw a great upsurge in literary production, with the introduction and reinvention of classical and Italian poetic forms into the language, with the establishment of public playhouses, with changing attitudes to passion, sex and gender encoded in courtly or popular writing, and with the growing awareness that Literature, generally speaking, can become a force to reckon with, above all, in political projects such as nation building. Indeed, the crucial claims of English and of Englishness, which return in present-day election rhetoric, were first made at this time as part of early modern cultural self-fashioning.
In the lecture, we shall look at crucial texts or excerpts – in poetry, prose and drama – by some leading writers like Thomas More, Philip Sidney, Edmund Spenser, Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare, Walter Ralegh, John Donne, John Milton or Andrew Marvell, to study such transactions between literature and power and to understand why engaging with this period is essential for anyone in English studies.