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完整後設資料紀錄
DC 欄位 | 值 | 語言 |
---|---|---|
dc.contributor.advisor | 魏思博(Vivienne R. Westbrook) | |
dc.contributor.author | Yu-Chun Chiang | en |
dc.contributor.author | 江昱均 | zh_TW |
dc.date.accessioned | 2021-06-13T04:24:18Z | - |
dc.date.available | 2006-07-26 | |
dc.date.copyright | 2006-07-26 | |
dc.date.issued | 2006 | |
dc.date.submitted | 2006-07-21 | |
dc.identifier.citation | Bibliography
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Hall, Edward. “The Preface.” The Vnion. A2r-A3r. ---. “Tryumphaunte Reigne of King Henry the VIIJ.” The Vnion. Fol.i-CC.lxiii. ---. The vnion of the two noble and illustre famelies of Lancastre & Yorke, beyng long in continuall discension for the croune of this noble realme : with al the actes done in both the tymes of the princes, both of the one linage & of the other.... London : Rychard Grafton, 1550. In Horace Howard Furness Memorial (Shakespeare) Library. Folio DA245 H23 1550. 11 Sep. 2004. SCETI. U. of Pennsylvania L. <http://dewey.library.upenn.edu/sceti/printedbooksNew/index.cfm?TextID=halle&PagePosition=785> Harrison, William. “Epistle Dedicatory” in “An Historicall description of the Iland of Britaine.” The Chronicles. A2r-v. Holinshed, Raphael. “King Henrie the eyghte.” The Chronicle of England, Scotlande and Irelande. London: Iohn Harrison, 1577. (STC 13568). 1464-1613. ---. The Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland. London: Henry Denham, 1587. In Horace Howard Furness Memorial (Shakespeare) Library. Folio DA130. H7 1587. 11 Sep. 2004. SCETI. U. of Pennsylvania L. <http://dewey.library.upenn.edu/sceti/printedbooksNew/index.cfm?TextID=holinshed_henryVIII&PagePosition=1> ---. “Epistle” in “A Treatise conteining a plaine and perfect description of Ireland.” The Chronicles. 3-4. ---. “Henrie the Eight, Sonne and Successor to Henrie the Seuenth.” The Chronicles. 799-978. The Holie Bible. Old Testament. (Roman Catholic Douai Bible). 2 vols. Douai, 1609-10. (STC 2207). Shakespeare, William. King Henry V. 3rd series of Arden Shakespeare. Ed. T.W.Craik. London: Thompson Learning EMEA, 1995. Shakespeare, William, and John Fletcher. King Henry VIII (All is True). 3rd series of Arden Shakespeare. Ed. Gordon McMullan. London: Thompson Learning EMEA, 2000. Vives, Juan Luis. The Education of a Christian Woman: A Sixteenth-Century Manual. Ed., Trans., & Intro. Charles Fantazzi. Chicago: U. of Chicago P., 2000. ---. The Instruction of A Christen Woman. Trans. Richard Hyrde. (London: Thomas Berthelet, ca. 1529). STC 24856. Edit. Virginia Walcott Beauchamp, Elizabeth H. Hageman, and Margaret Mikesell. Illinois: Board of Trustees of the U. of Illinois, 2002. Online. University of Illinois Press Electronic Books. Internet. Available from: http://www.press.uillinois.edu/epub/books.html. 1 Nov. 2005. Secondary Sources Amos, N. Scott, Andrew Pettegree, and Henk Van Nierop eds. The Education of a Christian Society: Humanism and the Reformation in Britain and the Netherlands. Aldershot: Ashgate, 1999. Amussen, Susan Dwyer. “Political Households and Domestic Politics: Family and Society in Early Modern Thought.” An Ordered Society: Gender and Class in Early Modern England. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988. 34-66. Anderson, Judith h. “Shakespeare’s Henry VIII: The Changing Relation of Truth to Fiction.” Biographical Truth. New Haven: Yale UP, 1984. 124-54. Baumann, Uwe, ed. Henry VIII in History, Historiography and Literature. Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1992. Beer, Jügen. “The Image of a King: Henry VIII in the Tudor Chronicle of Edward Hall and Raphael Holinshed.” Henry VIII: In History, Historiography and Literature. Ed. Uwe Baumann. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 1992. 129-49. Bevington, David. Action is Eloquence: Shakespeare’s Language of Gesture. Massachusetts: Harvard UP., 1984. Bowers, Robin. “‘The Merciful Construction of Good Women’: Katherine of Aragon and Pity in Shakespeare’s King Henry.” Christianity and Literature 37.3 (1988): 29-51. Bradshaw, Christopher J. “The Exile Literature of the Early Reformation: ‘Obedience to God and the King.” Amos, Pettegree, and Van Hierop, eds. 112-30. Carney, Jo Eldridge. “Queenship in Shakespeare’s Henry VIII: The Issue of Issue.” Political Rhetoric, Power, and Renaissance Women. Ed. Carole Levin and Patricia A. Sullivan. Albany: State U. of New York P., 1995. 189-202. Carr, E. H. What is History? Ed. R. W. Davies. 2nd ed. London: Penguin, 1987. Danson, Lawrence. “History.” Shakespeare’s Dramatic Genres. Oxford: Oxford UP., 2000. 86-112. Duffin, Ross W. “Orpheus with His Lute.” Shakespeare’s Songbook. New York: W. W. Norton, 2004. 289-91. Ephraim, Michelle. “From Jewish Monarch to Virgin Queen: Elizabeth I and The Godly Queen Hester.” Women’s Studies 30 (2001): 605-22. Evenden, Elizabeth, and Thomas S. Freeman. “Print, Profit and Propaganda: The Elizabethan Privy Council and the 1570 Edition of Foxe’s ‘Book of Martyrs.’” English Historical Review cxix.484 (2004): 1288-1307. Facey, Jane. “John Foxe and the Defence of the English Church.” Protestantism and the National Church in Sixteenth Century England. Ed. Peter Lake and Maria Dowling. London: Croom Helm, 1987. 162-92. Foakes, R. A., ed. King Henry VIII. William Shakespeare. 2nd series of Arden Shakespeare. 1957. (Methuen & Co. Ltd). London: Routledge, 1994. Frey, Charles. “‘O sacred, shadowy, cold, and constant queen’: Shakespeare’s Imperialed and Chastening Daughters of Romance.” The Woman’s Part: Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare. Ed. Carolyn Ruth Swift Lenz, Gayle Greene, and Carol Thomas Neely. Urbana: U. of Illinois P., 1980. 295-313. Frye, Northrop. The Great Code: The Bible and Literature. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1982. ---. Northrop Frye on Religion: Excluding The Great Code and Word with Power. Ed. Alvin A. Lee and Jean O’Grady. Toronto: U. of Toronto P., 2000. Gaunt, Sarah. “Visual Propaganda in England in the Later Middle Ages.” Propaganda: Political Rhetoric and Identity, 1300-2000. Ed. Bertrand Taithe and Time Thornton. Stroud: Sutton, 1999. 27-40. Hall, Stuart. “The Work of Representation.” Representation: Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices.” Ed. Stuart Hall. California: Sage, 1997. 15-74. Howard, Maurice. “Introduction.” The Tudor Image. London: Tate, 1995. 7-9. Hull, Suzanne W. Chaste, Silent & Obedient: English Books for Women 1475-1640. San Marino: Huntington Library, 1982. Jansen, Sharon L. “Trials and Examinations of the 1530.” Political Protest and Prophecy under Henry VIII. Suffolk: Boydell, 1991. 20-61. Jones, Edwin. “Building the Official Version of the English Past.” The English Nation: The Great Myth. 1998. Gloucestershire: Sutton, 2003. 37-72. Jordan, Constance. “Feminism and the Humanists: The Case of Sir Thomas Elyot’s Defence of Good Women.” Rewriting the Renaissance: the Discourses of Sexual Difference in Early Modern Europe. Ed. Margaret W. Ferguson, Maureen Quilligan, and Nancy J. Vickers. Chicago: U. of Chicago P., 1986. 242-58. Kennedy, Gwynne. Just Anger: Representing Women’s Anger in Early Modern England. Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois UP, 2000. Kermode, Frank. “What is Shakespeare’s Henry VIII about?” Durham University Journal 9 (1948): 48-55. Knapp, James A. “Stories and Icons: Reorienting the Visual in John Foxe’s Acts and Monuments.” Illustrating the Past in Early Modern England: The Representation of History in Printed Books. Hampshire: Ashgate, 2003. 124-61. Knott, John R. “Heroic Suffering.” Discourses of Martyrdom in English Literature, 1563-1694. Cambridge: Cambridge UP., 1993. 33-83. Lander, Jesse. “‘Foxe’s’ Books of Martyrs: Printing and Popularizing the Acts and Monuments.” Religion and Culture in Renaissance England. Ed. Claire McEachern and Debora Shuger. Cambridge: Cambridge UP., 1997. 69-92. Langley, Patricia. “Why a Pomegranate?” British Medical Journal. Online. Nov. 4, 2000. Internet. March 7th, 2006. 4 pages. Leadbetter, Ron. “Eleusinian mysteries.” Encyclopedia Mythica. Online. Internet. March 7th, 2006. Lehner, Ernst, and Johanna Lehner. Folklore and Symbolism of Flowers, Plants and Trees. New York: Dover, 2003. Lindemans, Micha F. “Hera.” Encyclopedia Mythica. Online. Internet. 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dc.identifier.uri | http://tdr.lib.ntu.edu.tw/jspui/handle/123456789/33081 | - |
dc.description.abstract | In this thesis, I will explore different representations of Katherine of Aragon in Renaissance typology, chronicles, martyrology, and drama within the contexts of key events of her life. Initially, Katherine of Aragon was typologically configured as a good and virtuous woman according to the powerful historical and biblical models of Zenobia, Vashti, and Ester. Vives, Erasmus, and Elyot all appropriated these models to lend their support to Katherine as she attempted to represent herself to Henry’s court in the divorce trial. However, later in the contexts of the Edwardian reign, Edward Hall endorsed the legitimacy of Edward VI by endorsing Henry’s divorce from Katherine. In The Vnion, Katherine was an object for Hall to illustrate Henry VIII’s wise and prosperous reign. Hall’s historical writing was apathetic to the representation of Katherine, while Raphael Holinshed’s The Chronicles was equivocal. Writing his chronicles in Elizabethan England, Holinshed not only provided negative images of a stubborn and defiant Katherine, undermining her marriage with Henry VIII, in order to endorse the legitimacy of Elizabeth I, but also depicted positive images of an articulate and virtuous Katherine, demonstrating women’s ability in politics, to confirm Elizabeth’s ability to rule. Compared to Hall and Holinshed, John Foxe, as a campaigner of Elizabethan Reformation, infused stronger Protestant propaganda into his descriptions of Katherine in the Actes and Monuments. In Foxe’s martyrological representation, the stubborn, unreasonable and angry Roman Catholic Queen Katherine impeded England’s progress toward order, while the obedient, virtuous and Protestant Queen Anne Boleyn assisted England in building the true Church of Christ. The contexts of the typological, historical and martyrological representations of Jacobean England are all accommodated in Shakespeare and Fletcher’s representation of a dramatically powerful Katherine in King Henry VIII: All is True. In the play, Katherine dominates Henry VIII’s court spatially, acts as the subjects’ spokesperson, and manipulates woman’s virtue and weakness to defy injustice and authority. Even after she is deposed, Katherine remains powerful in her own domestic court, and overshadows the new Queen Anne Boleyn. Although Katherine is dispelled from King Henry’s court, she is, through the insertion of a fictional dream vision, able to enter God’s court and retrieve her queenship. In the process of explaining representations of Katherine, this thesis will also demonstrate the possibilities and limitations of the generic modes of representation themselves. The Renaissance representations of Katherine of Aragon set up a pattern of a new kind of self-articulating woman, yet one who retains her virtues: one who may disobey secular authority yet retain her Christian virtue. | en |
dc.description.provenance | Made available in DSpace on 2021-06-13T04:24:18Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 ntu-95-R91122001-1.pdf: 1249013 bytes, checksum: 1e8221b5eada5f94adfb6b691ca3d516 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2006 | en |
dc.description.tableofcontents | Table of Contents
Abstract iv Acknowledgements vi Introduction 1 Chapter 1 Typological Representations of Katherine 11 1.1 The Idea of Typology and its Application 11 1.2 Becoming a Type 12 1.3 Historical Typology: Katherine in Thomas Elyot’s The Defence of Good Women 17 1.4 Religious Typology: Katherine in the Book of Ester of the Protestant and Roman Catholic Scriptures 25 1.4.1 Does Queen Ester only possess obedience? 26 1.4.2 Is Queen Vashti nothing but a disobedient queen? 31 1.5 Dramatic Typology: Katherine in A New Enterlude of Godly Queene Hester 35 Chapter 2 Historical Representations of Katherine: Edward Hall’s The Vnion and Raphael Holinshed’s The Chronicles 43 2.1 Introduction to Edward Hall’s and Raphael Holinshed’s Historical Writings 43 2.2 Katherine of Aragon: Queen of England 48 2.3 Katherine of Aragon: Queen, Princess, or Dowager? 58 2.4 Katherine of Aragon: Deposed Queen 72 2.5 Anne Boleyn: Short-Lived Queen 79 Chapter 3 Martyrological Representations of Katherine: John Foxe’s Actes and Monuments 89 3.1 Introduction to “the Elizabethan Martyrology” 89 3.2 Queen Katherine of Aragon in the Divorce Case 92 3.3 Katherine as a Stubborn Queen 102 3.4 Katherine as an Angry Queen 105 3.5 Katherine vs. Anne: Chaos vs. Order 107 3.6 Katherine’s Fall as a Device to Prove God’s Providence 112 Chapter 4 Dramatic Representations of Katherine: William Shakespeare and John Fletcher’s King Henry VIII (All is True) 121 4.1 Introduction 121 4.1.1 Collaborative Authorship 121 4.1.2 Sources Adapted 122 4.2 Katherine, the Queen of England, in the Court of Henry VIII 127 4.2.1 A Defender of the Commoners and the Nobles 127 4.2.1.1 Katherine’s Defense for the Commoners 129 4.2.1.2 Katherine’s Defense for the Duke of Buckingham 134 4.2.2 A Poor Women, Stranger, and Foreign Queen Litigant 142 4.3 Katherine, the Princess Dowager, in the Domestic Court of Her Own 149 4.3.1 A Housewife and Deposed Queen 149 4.3.2 A Phantom in Queen Anne Boleyn’s court 157 4.4 Katherine, the Heavenly Queen, in the Court of God 167 4.4.1 A Mother, Mistress and Believer 167 4.4.2 A Non-Consanguine Model for the Future Queen Elizabeth I 173 Conclusion 178 Appendix 182 Bibliography 186 Primary Sources 186 Secondary Sources 188 | |
dc.language.iso | en | |
dc.title | 英國文藝復興時期凱瑟琳•亞拉岡皇后的再現 | zh_TW |
dc.title | Renaissance Representations of Katherine of Aragon | en |
dc.type | Thesis | |
dc.date.schoolyear | 94-2 | |
dc.description.degree | 碩士 | |
dc.contributor.oralexamcommittee | 蘇其康,王淑華 | |
dc.subject.keyword | 凱瑟琳‧亞拉岡,再現,皇后,女性研究,英國文藝復興,文類 (類型學、編年史、殉教者列傳、歷史劇),湯瑪斯‧艾略特《The Defence of Good Women》(1545),以斯帖記(1560年日內瓦聖經、1609年杜埃版舊約聖經),《A New Enterlude of Godly Queene Hester》(1561),愛德華‧霍爾編年史(1550),拉斐爾‧何林塞《史記》(1577年版、 1587年版),約翰‧福克斯《殉道者書》(1563年版、 1570年版、1576年版、 1583年版),威廉‧莎士比亞與約翰‧傅萊徹《亨利八世》, | zh_TW |
dc.subject.keyword | Katherine of Aragon,Representations,Queenship,Woman Study,English Renaissance,Genres (Typology, Chronicle, Martyrology, History Play),Book of Ester (1560 Geneva Bible, 1609 Douai Old Testament),A New Enterlude of Godly Queene Hester (1561), | en |
dc.relation.page | 194 | |
dc.rights.note | 有償授權 | |
dc.date.accepted | 2006-07-22 | |
dc.contributor.author-college | 文學院 | zh_TW |
dc.contributor.author-dept | 外國語文學研究所 | zh_TW |
顯示於系所單位: | 外國語文學系 |
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