French Renaissance Tragedy
An obvious feature of any sixteenth-century French poetry, of whatever genre, is its allusiveness; this could hardly be otherwise, given the importance of imitation as a principle of poetic creation in the Renaissance, and the Pleiade reliance on a select, well-educated readership who would recognise and appreciate echoes and re-workings of classical models.
April 20, 2006
publish date
Paperback
physical format
186
pages
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
External links
Librarything
https://www.librarything.com/work/4111707Related works