ABSTRACT

With a panoramic sweep across continents and topics, Early Modern Improvisations is an interdisciplinary collection that analyzes the relationship between early modern literature and history through lenses such as gender, ethnicity, sexuality, religion, and politics.

The book engages readers interested in texts that range from Shakespeare and Tudor queens to Anglican missionary work in North America; from contemporary feminist television series to Ancient Greek linguistic and philosophical concepts; from the delicate dance of diplomatic exchange to the instabilities of illness, food insecurity, and piracy. Its range of contributions encourages readers to discover their own intersections across literary and historical texts, a sense of discovery that this collection’s contributors learned from its dedicatee, John Watkins, a major literary and cultural historian whose work moves effortlessly across geographical, temporal, and political borders. His work and his personality embody the spirit of creative improvisation that brings new ideas together, allowing texts and figures of history to haunt later eras and encourage new questions.

This volume is aimed at scholars and students alike who wish to explore early modern culture and its reverberations in ways that engage with a world outside the grand narratives and centralized institutions of power, a world that is more provisional, less scripted, and more improvisational.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Of Gentle Deeds and Generative Improvisations

chapter 1|14 pages

“Sad Stories of the Death of Queens”

Elizabethan Beginnings and Endings 1

chapter 2|11 pages

Queen Elizabeth's Seneca

chapter 3|11 pages

“Not by Blood”

Queenship in All Is True (Henry VIII)

chapter 4|12 pages

Dangerous Wombs

Pregnant Bodies in Early Modern Drama and History

chapter 7|11 pages

“The Excellent Civil Policy of the Jesuits … Deserves our Imitation:”

Anglican Missionaries, Native Americans, and the Jesuit Utopia of Paraguay

chapter 8|11 pages

Between Diary, Comedy, and Diplomatic Report. Writing in the Midst of the Italian Wars

Francesco Vettori's Viaggio in Alamagna, 1507–1515 1

chapter 9|11 pages

Shakespeare's Italian Loves

Petrarch, Boccaccio, Ariosto in Much Ado About Nothing

chapter 12|11 pages

“We Must be Gentle now we are Gentlemen”

The Complex Concept of Kaloskagathos 1

chapter 13|11 pages

Ruinations

Petrarch in Rome, Navagero in Granada

chapter 14|11 pages

Life-Writing Dapifers

Early Modern Women as Textual Stewards

chapter 16|11 pages

“A Body yet Distempered”

Being Sick at Home in Shakespeare's 2 Henry IV

chapter 18|10 pages

The Russians are Coming, the Russians are Coming

Anglo-Russian Interplay in the English Renaissance

chapter |3 pages

Afterword

Early Modern Literary and Historical Improvisations: Toward a Generative Historicism