ABSTRACT

Early Modern Catholics, Royalists, and Cosmopolitans considers how the marginalized perspective of 16th-century English Catholic exiles and 17th-century English royalist exiles helped to generate a form of cosmopolitanism that was rooted in contemporary religious and national identities but also transcended those identities. Author Brian C. Lockey argues that English discourses of nationhood were in conversation with two opposing 'cosmopolitan' perspectives, one that sought to cultivate and sustain the emerging English nationalism and imperialism and another that challenged English nationhood from the perspective of those Englishmen who viewed the kingdom as one province within the larger transnational Christian commonwealth. Lockey illustrates how the latter cosmopolitan perspective, produced within two communities of exiled English subjects, separated in time by half a century, influenced fiction writers such as Sir Philip Sidney, Edmund Spenser, Anthony Munday, Sir John Harington, John Milton, and Aphra Behn. Ultimately, he shows that early modern cosmopolitans critiqued the emerging discourse of English nationhood from a traditional religious and political perspective, even as their writings eventually gave rise to later secular Enlightenment forms of cosmopolitanism.

chapter |34 pages

Introduction

Catholics, Royalists, Cosmopolitans: Writing England into the Christian Commonwealth

part I|175 pages

Part I

chapter 2|56 pages

Border-Crossing and Translation

The Cosmopolitics of Edmund Campion, S.J., Anthony Munday, and Sir John Harington

chapter 3|36 pages

Cosmopolitan Romance

Philip Sidney, Edmund Spenser, and the Fiction of Imperial Justice

part II|101 pages

Part II

chapter II|12 pages

Part II Introduction Royalists

chapter 5|38 pages

From Foreign War to Civil War

The Royalist Reinvention of the Christian Commonwealth

chapter 6|30 pages

The Christian Nation and Beyond

Camões's Os Lusíadas and John Milton's Cosmopolitan Republic

chapter 7|20 pages

Royalist Turned Cosmopolitan

Aphra Behn's Portrait of the Prostituted Sovereign

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

The Public Sphere and the Legacy of the Christian Commonwealth